Academic literature on the topic 'Low-dimensional magnetic oxide'

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Journal articles on the topic "Low-dimensional magnetic oxide"

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Kataev, V., J. Pommer, K. Y. Choi, P. Lemmens, A. Ionescu, Yu Pashkevich, K. Lamonova, A. Möller, A. Freimuth, and G. Güntherodt. "Magnetic exchange in a low-dimensional complex oxide (,)." Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 272-276 (May 2004): 933–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmmm.2003.12.527.

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Al-Rashed, Abdullah A. A. A., Lioua Kolsi, Mohammed A. Tashkandi, Emad Hasani Malekshah, Ali J. Chamkha, and Mohamad Naceur Borjini. "Three-dimensional combined radiation-magnetoconvection of low electrically conductive dielectric oxide melt." International Journal of Numerical Methods for Heat & Fluid Flow 29, no. 10 (October 7, 2019): 3611–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/hff-06-2018-0263.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate the coupled effect of magnetic field and radiation on convective heat transfer of low electrically conductive dielectric oxide melt. Design/methodology/approach The 3D Navier–Stokes equations are formulated using the vector potential-vorticity formulation and solved using the finite volume method (FVM). The radiative heat transfer equation is discretized using the FTnFVM method. A code was written using FORTRAN language. Findings The obtained numerical results are focused on the effect of the different parameters on the heat transfer and the flow structure with a special interest on the 3D transvers flow. It is found that the flow is developing in inner spirals and the magnetic field intensifies this 3D character. The radiation acts mainly at the core of the enclosure and causes the apparition of the merging phenomenon near the front and back walls. Originality/value The effect of magnetic field on convective heat transfer of highly electrically conductive fluids has been intensively studied. Reciprocally, the case of a fluid with low electrical conductivity is not so much investigated, especially when it is coupled with the effect of radiation. These two effects are studied in this paper for the case of a low-conductive LiNbO3 oxide melt.
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Cui, Zhangzhang, Alexander J. Grutter, Hua Zhou, Hui Cao, Yongqi Dong, Dustin A. Gilbert, Jingyuan Wang, et al. "Correlation-driven eightfold magnetic anisotropy in a two-dimensional oxide monolayer." Science Advances 6, no. 15 (April 2020): eaay0114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aay0114.

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Engineering magnetic anisotropy in two-dimensional systems has enormous scientific and technological implications. The uniaxial anisotropy universally exhibited by two-dimensional magnets has only two stable spin directions, demanding 180° spin switching between states. We demonstrate a previously unobserved eightfold anisotropy in magnetic SrRuO3 monolayers by inducing a spin reorientation in (SrRuO3)1/(SrTiO3)N superlattices, in which the magnetic easy axis of Ru spins is transformed from uniaxial 〈001〉 direction (N < 3) to eightfold 〈111〉 directions (N ≥ 3). This eightfold anisotropy enables 71° and 109° spin switching in SrRuO3 monolayers, analogous to 71° and 109° polarization switching in ferroelectric BiFeO3. First-principle calculations reveal that increasing the SrTiO3 layer thickness induces an emergent correlation-driven orbital ordering, tuning spin-orbit interactions and reorienting the SrRuO3 monolayer easy axis. Our work demonstrates that correlation effects can be exploited to substantially change spin-orbit interactions, stabilizing unprecedented properties in two-dimensional magnets and opening rich opportunities for low-power, multistate device applications.
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SANTAMARIA, JACOBO, JAVIER GARCIA-BARRIOCANAL, ZOUHAIR SEFRIOUI, and CARLOS LEON. "INDUCED MAGNETISM AT OXIDE INTERFACES." International Journal of Modern Physics B 27, no. 19 (July 15, 2013): 1330013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0217979213300132.

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Interfaces between correlated oxides are attracting great interest. Electron correlations give rise to novel forms of couplings between electronic ground states at both sides of the interface. The bonding discontinuity at the interface between magnetic and nonmagnetic oxides is at the origin of a form of low dimensional magnetism in the otherwise nonmagnetic material. Its origin is the splitting of its bands due to the hybridization with the exchange split bands of the magnetic material. This induced magnetism could find interesting functionalities in devices with operation controlled by the interface such as tunnel or field effect devices of interest in spintronics.
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GREENBLATT, MARTHA. "PHOSPHATE TUNGSTEN BRONZES — A NEW FAMILY OF QUASI-LOW-DIMENSIONAL METALLIC OXIDES." International Journal of Modern Physics B 07, no. 23n24 (October 30, 1993): 3937–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0217979293003553.

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A brief introduction is presented on transition metal oxide bronzes and their relationship to the phosphate tungsten bronzes; the latter compounds are the major focus of this review. The phosphate tungsten bronzes (PTB) are a new class of quasi-low-dimensional materials which exhibit charge density wave (CDW) instabilities. The growth of single crystals and investigation of the physical properties including the temperature dependence of the electrical resistivity and magnetic susceptibility on oriented single crystals are discussed for selected members of the major families in the PTB’s. Correlation of the physical measurement data with structural properties, X-ray diffraction data and results of the theoretical band structure calculations are also presented.
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Li, Yangmu, J. Terzic, P. G. Baity, Dragana Popović, G. D. Gu, Qiang Li, A. M. Tsvelik, and J. M. Tranquada. "Tuning from failed superconductor to failed insulator with magnetic field." Science Advances 5, no. 6 (June 2019): eaav7686. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aav7686.

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Do charge modulations compete with electron pairing in high-temperature copper oxide superconductors? We investigated this question by suppressing superconductivity in a stripe-ordered cuprate compound at low temperature with high magnetic fields. With increasing field, loss of three-dimensional superconducting order is followed by reentrant two-dimensional superconductivity and then an ultraquantum metal phase. Circumstantial evidence suggests that the latter state is bosonic and associated with the charge stripes. These results provide experimental support to the theoretical perspective that local segregation of doped holes and antiferromagnetic spin correlations underlies the electron-pairing mechanism in cuprates.
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GILDENBLAT, G., and D. FOTY. "LOW TEMPERATURE MODELS OF METAL OXIDE SEMICONDUCTOR FIELD-EFFECT TRANSISTORS." International Journal of High Speed Electronics and Systems 06, no. 02 (June 1995): 317–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0129156495000092.

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We review the modeling of silicon MOS devices in the 10–300 K temperature range with an emphasis on the specifics of low-temperature operation. Recently developed one-dimensional models of long-channel transistors are discussed in connection with experimental determination and verification of the effective channel mobility in a wide temperature range. We also present analytical pseudo-two-dimensional models of short-channel devices which have been proposed for potential use in circuit simulators. Several one-, two-, and three-dimensional numerical models are discussed in order to gain insight into the more subtle details of the low-temperature device physics of MOS transistors and capacitors. Particular attention is paid to freezeout effects which, depending on the device design and the ambient temperature range, may or may not be important for actual device operation. The numerical models are applied to study the characteristic time scale of freezeout transients in the space-charge regions of silicon devices, to the analysis and suppression of delayed turn-off in MOS transistors with compensated channel, and to the temperature dependence of three-dimensional effects in short-channel, narrow-channel MOSFETs.
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Netzer, Falko P., Francesco Allegretti, and Svetlozar Surnev. "Low-dimensional oxide nanostructures on metals: Hybrid systems with novel properties." Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B, Nanotechnology and Microelectronics: Materials, Processing, Measurement, and Phenomena 28, no. 1 (January 2010): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.3268503.

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Ezhovskii, Yu K. "Chemical nanotechnology of oxide and nitride low-dimensional structures on a semiconductor matrix." Russian Microelectronics 39, no. 3 (May 20, 2010): 182–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1134/s1063739710030054.

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Manoua, Mohamed, Tariq Jannane, Otmane Abouelala, Nejma Fazouan, Abdelmajid Almaggoussi, Najoua Kamoun, and Ahmed Liba. "Modeling and optimization of n-ZnO/p-Si heterojunction using 2-dimensional numerical simulation." European Physical Journal Applied Physics 90, no. 1 (April 2020): 10101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjap/2020190333.

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In this work, n-ZnO/p-Si heterojunction was investigated using two-dimensional numerical simulation. The effect of Zinc Oxide thickness, carrier concentration in Zinc Oxide layer, minority carrier lifetime of bulk Silicon and the interface states density on electrical properties were studied in dark and under illumination conditions. This study aimed to optimize these parameters in order to obtain n-ZnO/p-Si solar cell with high conversion efficiency and low cost. The simulation was carried out by Atlas silvaco software. As results, a very low saturation current Is, low series resistance Rs, an ideality factor n between 1 and 1.5 were obtained for optimal charge carrier concentrations in the range [5 × 1019–5 × 1021 cm−3] and a thickness of Zinc Oxide between 0.6 and 2 µm. Moreover, a photovoltaic conversion efficiency of 24.75% was achieved without interfacial defect, which decreases to 5.49% for an interface defect density of 5 × 1014 cm−2.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Low-dimensional magnetic oxide"

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Franke, Isabel. "Magnetism in quasi-low-dimensional systems investigated with muon spin rotation and high magnetic fields." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2011. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:59880538-c5a5-4f7c-9d81-64e0d97f4ad1.

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This thesis presents the investigation of magnetism in a selection of low-dimensional systems and its relation to other physical properties, such as superconductivity. The techniques employed are muon spin rotation and pulsed magnetic field magnetisation. The ability of muons to directly probe the local field is used to study SrFeAsF, which is a parent compound of the high-temperature superconducting pnictides. This revealed that the magnetic and structural transitions are separated in this system. I then demon- strate the coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity in NaFeAs for the first time. This discovery is of great interest since the interplay between magnetism and supercon- ductivity is thought to play an important role for high-temperature superconductivity. I further investigate the effect of partially replacing Fe with Co in NaFeAs. I study the ordering and spin reorientation in the Mott insulator Sr₂IrO₄, which has been suggested as a possible high-temperature superconductor. The complex magnetism observed in this system is contrasted to that in related iridates Ca₄IrO₆, Ca₅Ir₃O₁₂ and Sr₃Ir₂O₇. By combining pulsed-field magnetization and low magnetic field experiments with μSR on a series of coordination polymers. I am able to determine the size and direction of the magnetic exchange interaction. I demonstrate how it is possible to adjust the in- teractions by altering the molecular architecture of these Cu-based spin- 1 2 compounds. This is a significant contribution since it will lead to the targeted design of magnetic systems that can be utilized to experimentally test fundamental theories of magnetism.
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Wheeler, Elisa Maria da Silva. "Neutron scattering from low-dimensional quantum magnets." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2007. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:a8411774-4a3e-4fc3-80a1-d7e8612cba71.

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Neutron scattering measurements were used to investigate the magnetic and crystal structure and magnetic excitations of three compounds characterized as low-dimensional quantum magnets. The materials are frustrated systems with low spin quantum number. The first was a powder sample of AgNiO2. The Ni ions form a triangular lattice antiferromagnet in which, according to the published crystal structure, both the orbital order and magnetic couplings are frustrated. However, it is shown here that there was a small distortion of the crystal structure at 365 K, which is proposed to result from charge disproportionation and this relieves the orbital frustration. The magnetic structure was investigated and, below 20 K, the triangular lattice of electron-rich Ni sites was observed to order into antiferromagnetic stripes. Investigations of the magnetic excitations showed that the main dispersions were within the triangular plane, indicating a strong two-dimensionality. The dispersion was larger along the stripes than between the stripes of collinear spins. The second material investigated was CoNb2O6, a quasi Ising-like ferromagnet. It was studied with a magnetic field applied transverse to the Ising direction. The magnetic field introduced quantum fluctuations which drove a phase transition at a field comparable to the main exchange interaction. The phase diagram of the magnetic order was mapped outs and a transition from an ordered phase to a paramagnetic phase was identified at high field. This low-temperature high-field phase transition was further investigated by inelastic neutron scattering measurements to observe the change in the energy gap and magnetic excitation spectrum on either side of the transition. The spectrum had two components in the ordered phase and had sharp magnon modes in the paramagnetic phase. The third material was the spin-half layered antiferromagnet CuSb2O6. It has a square lattice of Cu2+ ions in which the main interaction is across only one diagonal of the square. The magnetic structure was studied by neutron scattering with a field applied along the direction of the zero-field ordered moment. A spin-flop was observed at low field and there was evidence for a high-field transition. The magnetic excitation spectrum was unusual in that it had an intense resonance at 13 meV at the magnetic Brillouin zone boundary.
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Kaul, Enrique Eduardo. "Experimental Investigation of New Low-Dimensional Spin Systems in Vanadium Oxides." Doctoral thesis, Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2005. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:swb:14-1131439690937-49243.

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In this dissertation we reported our experimental investigation of the magnetic properties of nine low-dimensional vanadium compounds. Two of these materials are completely new (Pb2V5O12 and Pb2VO(PO4)2) and were found during our search for new low-dimensional vanadium oxides. Among the other seven vanadium compounds studied, three were physically investigated for the first time (Sr2VO(PO4)2, BaZnVO(PO4)2 and SrZnVO(PO4)2). Two had hitherto only preliminary, and wrongly interpreted, susceptibility measurements reported in the literature (Sr2V3O9 and Ba2V3O9) while the remaining two (Li2VOSiO4 and Li2VOGeO4) were previously investigated in some detail but the interpretation of the data was controversial. We investigated the magnetic properties of these materials by means of magnetic susceptibility and specific heat (Cp(T)) measurements (as well as single crystal ESR measurements in the case of Sr2V3O9). We synthesized the samples necessary for our physical studies. That required a search of the optimal synthesis conditions for obtaining pure, high quality, polycrystalline samples. Single crystals of Sr2V3O9 and Pb2VO(PO4)2 were also successfully grown. Pb2VO(PO4)2, BaZnVO(PO4)2, SrZnVO(PO4)2, Li2VOSiO4 and Li2VOGeO4 were found to be experimental examples of frustrated square-lattice systems which are described by the J1-J2 model. We found that Li2VOSiO4 and Li2VOGeO4 posses a weakly frustrated antiferromagnetic square lattice while Pb2VO(PO4)2, BaZnVO(PO4)2 and SrZnVO(PO4)2 form a more strongly frustrated ferromagnetic square lattice. Pb2V5O12 is structurally and compositionally related to the two dimensional A2+V4+nO2n+1 vanadates. Its structure consists of layers formed by edge- and corner-shared square VO5 pyramids. The basic structural units are plaquettes consisting of six corner-shared pyramids pointing in the same direction, which form a spin lattice of novel geometry
In dieser Dissertation berichteten wir über unsere experimentelle Untersuchung der magnetischen Eigenschaften von neun Niedrigdimensionalen vanadiumverbindungen. Zwei dieser Materialien sind vollständig neu (Pb2VO12 und Pb2VO(PO4)2) und wurden während unserer Suche nach neuen Niedrigdimensionalen Vanadiumoxiden gefunden. Unter den anderen sieben studierten Vanadiumverbindungen, wurden drei physikalisch zum ersten Mal nachgeforscht (Sr2VO(PO4)2, BaZnVO(PO4)2 und SrZnVO(PO4)2). Zwei hatten bisher nur einleitendes, und falsch gedeutet, magnetische Susceptibilitaet Messungen, die in der Literatur berichtet wurden (Sr2V3O9 und Ba2V3O9) während die restlichen zwei (Li2VOSiO4 und Li2VOGeO4) vorher in irgendeinem Detail aber in der Deutung der Daten waren umstritten nachgeforscht wurden. Wir forschten die magnetischen Eigenschaften dieser Materialien mittels der magnetischen Susceptibilitaet und der spezifischen Waerme (Cp(T)) nach (sowie ESR-Messungen des einzelnen Kristalles im Fall von Sr2V3O9). Wir synthetisierten die Proben, die für unsere körperlichen Studien notwendig sind. Das erforderte eine Suche der optimalen Synthesezustände für das Erreichen der reinen, hohen Qualität, polykristalline Proben. Einzelne Kristalle von Sr2V3O9 und von Pb2VO(PO4)2 wurden auch erfolgreich gewachsen. Pb2VO(PO4)2, BaZnVO(PO4)2, SrZnVO(PO4)2, Li2VOSiO4 und Li2VOGeO4 werden gefunden, um experimentelle Beispiele der frustrierten Quadrat-Gittersysteme zu sein, die durch das J1-j2 model. Wir fanden daß posses Li2VOSiO4 und Li2VOGeO4 ein schwach frustriertes antiferromagnetische quadratisches Gitter, während Pb2VO(PO4)2, BaZnVO(PO4)2 und SrZnVO(PO4)2 ein stärker frustriertes ferromagnetisches quadratisches Gitter bilden. Pb2V5O12 strukturell und zusammenhängt kreativ mit den zweidimensionalen vanadates A2+V4+nO2n+1 beschrieben werden. Seine Struktur besteht aus den Schichten, die durch Rand und Ecke-geteilte quadratische Pyramiden VO5 gebildet werden. Die grundlegenden strukturellen Maßeinheiten sind die plaquettes, die aus sechs Ecke-geteilten Pyramiden bestehen, die in die gleiche Richtung zeigen, die ein Drehbeschleunigunggitter von Romangeometrie bilden
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Lenertz, Marc. "Propriétés structurales et magnétiques de cobaltites de types CoV2O6 à structure unidimensionnelle avec un intérêt potentiel pour la spintronique." Phd thesis, Université de Strasbourg, 2013. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01063444.

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Le but de ce travail de thèse est de réaliser des vannes de spin " naturelles " constituées d'un matériau unique. Le matériau en question doit contenir une alternance de feuillets magnétiques et non magnétiques et présenter différents états magnétiques. Ce système modèle ne présenterait alors ni d'inter diffusion ni de rugosité aux interfaces magnétiques/non-magnétiques et pourrait constituer un système modèle pour les études des phénomènes de transport dépendant de spin. Le CoV2O6 est un oxyde polymorphe de basse dimensionnalité. Les deux phases (α et γ) présentent chacune plusieurs plateaux d'aimantation induits par un champ magnétique. Le premier objectif est de comprendre la structure cristalline et magnétique de ce composé, ce qui a été réalisé par des mesures d'aimantation, de diffraction des rayons X et de neutrons sur des poudres et monocristaux. Les résultats de la phase α sont appuyés par des calculs ab initio. Le second objectif est de déposer ce matériau en couche mince afin d'analyser ses propriétés de transport. Des films épitaxiés de γ CoV2O6 ont été obtenus sur TiO2(100) et TiO2/Pt(111) par ablation laser. Le dépôt sur l'électrode de Pt montre la présence de six variants entrainant l'observation de plateaux d'aimantation supplémentaires.
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Wang, Li-Ming Verfasser], Thomas [Akademischer Betreuer] [Brückel, and Joachim [Akademischer Betreuer] Mayer. "Manipulation of magnetism in iron oxide nanoparticle : BaTiO3 composites and low-dimensional iron oxide nanoparticle arrays / Li-Ming Wang ; Thomas Brückel, Joachim Mayer." Aachen : Universitätsbibliothek der RWTH Aachen, 2018. http://d-nb.info/1176421832/34.

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Schmitt, Miriam. "Microscopic description of magnetic model compounds." Doctoral thesis, Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2013. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-110282.

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Solid state physics comprises many interesting physical phenomena driven by the complex interplay of the crystal structure, magnetic and orbital degrees of freedom, quantum fluctuations and correlation. The discovery of materials which exhibit exotic phenomena like low dimensional magnetism, superconductivity, thermoelectricity or multiferroic behavior leads to various applications which even directly influence our daily live. For such technical applications and the purposive modification of materials, the understanding of the underlying mechanisms in solids is a precondition. Nowadays DFT based band structure programs become broadly available with the possibility to calculate systems with several hundreds of atoms in reasonable time scales and high accuracy using standard computers due to the rapid technical and conceptional development in the last decades. These improvements allow to study physical properties of solids from their crystal structure and support the search for underlying mechanisms of different phenomena from microscopic grounds. This thesis focuses on the theoretical description of low dimensional magnets and intermetallic compounds. We combine DFT based electronic structure and model calculations to develop the magnetic properties of the compounds from microscopic grounds. The developed, intuitive pictures were challenged by model simulations with various experiments, probing microscopic and macroscopic properties, such as thermodynamic measurements, high field magnetization, nuclear magnetic resonance or electron spin resonance experiments. This combined approach allows to investigate the close interplay of the crystal structure and the magnetic properties of complex materials in close collaboration with experimentalists. In turn, the systematic variation of intrinsic parameters by substitution or of extrinsic factors, like magnetic field, temperature or pressure is an efficient way to probe the derived models. Especially pressure allows a continuous change of the crystal structure on a rather large energy scale without the chemical complexity of substitution, thus being an ideal tool to consistently alter the electronic structure in a controlled way. Our theoretical results not only provide reliable descriptions of real materials, exhibiting disorder, partial site occupation and/or strong correlations, but also predict fascinating phenomena upon extreme conditions. In parts this theoretical predictions were already confirmed by own experiments on large scale facilities. Whereas in the first part of this work the main purpose was to develop reliable magnetic models of low dimensional magnets, in the second part we unraveled the underlying mechanism for different phase transitions upon pressure. In more detail, the first part of this thesis is focused on the magnetic ground states of spin 1/2 transition metal compounds which show fascinating phase diagrams with many unusual ground states, including various types of magnetic order, like helical states exhibiting different pitch angles, driven by the intimate interplay of structural details and quantum fluctuations. The exact arrangement and the connection of the magnetically active building blocks within these materials determine the hybridization, orbital occupation, and orbital orientation, this way altering the exchange paths and strengths of magnetic interaction within the system and consequently being crucial for the formation of the respective ground states. The spin 1/2 transition metal compounds, which have been investigated in this work, illustrate the great variety of exciting phenomena fueling the huge interest in this class of materials. We focused on cuprates with magnetically active CuO4 plaquettes, mainly arranged into edge sharing geometries. The influence of structural peculiarities, as distortion, folding, changed bonding angles, substitution or exchanged ligands has been studied with respect to their relevance for the magnetic ground state. Besides the detailed description of the magnetic ground states of selected compounds, we attempted to unravel the origin for the formation of a particular magnetic ground state by deriving general trends and relations for this class of compounds. The details of the treatment of the correlation and influence of structural peculiarities like distortion or the bond angles are evaluated carefully. In the second part of this work we presented the results of joint theoretical and experimental studies for intermetallic compounds, all exhibiting an isostructural phase transition upon pressure. Many different driving forces for such phase transitions are known like quantum fluctuations, valence instabilities or magnetic ordering. The combination of extensive computational studies and high pressure XRD, XAS and XMCD experiments using synchrotron radiation reveals completely different underlying mechanism for the onset of the phase transitions in YCo5, SrFe2As2 and EuPd3Bx. This thesis demonstrates on a series of complex compounds that the combination of ab-initio electronic structure calculations with numerical simulations and with various experimental techniques is an extremely powerful tool for a successful description of the intriguing quantum phenomena in solids. This approach is able to reduce the complex behavior of real materials to simple but appropriate models, this way providing a deep understanding for the underlying mechanisms and an intuitive picture for many phenomena. In addition, the close interaction of theory and experiment stimulates the improvement and refinement of the methods in both areas, pioneering the grounds for more and more precise descriptions. Further pushing the limits of these mighty techniques will not only be a precondition for the success of fundamental research at the frontier between physics and chemistry, but also enables an advanced material design on computational grounds.
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Mukherjee, Sumanta. "Internal Structure and Self-Assembly of Low Dimensional Materials." Thesis, 2013. http://etd.iisc.ernet.in/2005/3474.

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The properties of bulk 3D materials of metals or semiconductors are manifested with various length scales(e.g., Bohr excitonic radius, magnetic correlation length, mean free path etc.) and are important in controlling their properties. When the size of the material is smaller than these characteristics length scales, the confinement effects operate reflecting changes in their physical behavior. Materials with such confinement effects can be designated as low dimensional materials. There are exceedingly large numbers of low dimensional materials and the last half a century has probably seen the maximum evolution of such materials in terms of synthesis, characterization, understanding and modification of their properties and applications. The field of” nanoscience and nanotechnology”, have become a mature field within the last three decades where, for certain application, synthesis of materials of sizes in the nanometer range can be designed and controlled. Interface plays a very important role in controlling properties of heterogeneous material of every dimensionality. For example, the interface forms in 2D thin films or interface of heterogeneous nanoparticles(0D). In recent times, a large number of remarkable phenomena have triggered understanding and controlling properties arises due to nature of certain interface. In the field of nanoparticles, it is well known that the photoluminescence property depends very strongly on the nature of interface in heterostructured nanoparticles. In the recent time a large variety of heterostructured nanoparticles starting from core-shell to quantum dot-quantum well kind has been synthesized to increase the photoluminescence efficiency up to 80%. Along with improvement of certain properties due to heterostructure formation inside the nanoparticles, the techniques to understand the nature of those interfaces have improved side by side. It has been recently shown that variable energy X-ray Photoemission Spectroscopy (XPS) can be employed to understand the nature of interfaces (internal structure) of such heterostructure nanoparticles in great detail with high accuracy. While most of the previous studies of variable energy XPS, uses photonenergies sensitive to smaller sized particle, we have extended the idea of such nondestructive approach of understanding the nature of buried interfaces to bigger sized nanoparticles by using photon energy as high as 8000eV, easily available in various 3rd generation synchrotron centers. The nature of the interface also plays an important role in multilayer thin films. Major components of various electronic devices, like read head memory devices, field effect transistors etc., rely on interface properties of certain multilayer thin film materials. In recent time wide range of unusual phenomenon such as high mobility metallic behavior between two insulating oxide, superconductivity, interface ferroelectricity, unusual magnetism, multiferroicity etc. has been observed at oxide interface making it an interesting field of study. We have shown that variable energy photoemission spectroscopy with high photon energies, can be a useful tool to realize such interfaces and controlling the properties of multilayered devices, as well as to understand the origin of unusual phenomenon exists at several multilayer interfaces. Chapter1 provides a brief description of low dimensional materials, overall perspective of interesting properties in materials with reduced dimensionality. We have emphasized on the importance of determining the internal structure of buried interface of different dimensionalities. We have given a brief overview and importance of different interfaces that we have studied in the subsequent chapters dealing with specific interfaces. Chapter 2 describes experimental and theoretical methods used for the study of interface and self-assembly reported in this thesis. These methods are divided into two categories. The first section deals with different experimental techniques, like, UV-Visible absorption and photoluminescence spectroscopy, X-Photoelectron Spectroscopy(XPS), X-Ray diffraction, Transmission Electron Microscopy(TEM) etc. This section also includes brief overview on synchrotron radiation and methods used for detail analysis of interface structure using variable energy XPS. In the second part of this chapter, we have discussed theoretical methods used in the present study. \ In Chapter 3A we have combined low energy XPS, useful to extract information of the surface of the nanoparticles, with high energy XPS, important to extract bulk information and have characterized the internal structure of nanoparticle system of different heterogeneity. We have chosen two important heterostructure systems namely, inverted core-shell(CdScore-CdSeshell) type nanoparticles and homogeneous alloy(CdSeS)type nanoparticles. Such internal structure study revealed that the actual internal structure of certain nanomaterial can be widely different from the aim of the synthesis and knowledge of internal structure is a prerequisite in understanding their property. We were able to extend the idea of variable energy XPS to higher energy limit. Many speculations have been made about the probable role of interface in controlling properties, like blinking behavior of bigger sized core-shell nanoparticles, but no conclusive support has yet been given about the nature of such interface. After successfully extending the technique to determine the internal structure of heterostructured nanoparticles to very high photon energy region, we took the opportunity to determine the internal structure of nanoparticles of sizes as large as 12nm with high energy photoemission spectroscopy for the first time. In Chapter 3B we emphasize on the importance of interface structure in controlling the behavior of bigger sized nanoparticles systems, the unsettled issues regarding their internal structure, and described the usefulness of high energy XPS in elucidating the internal structure of such big particles with grate accuracy to solve such controversies. The existence of high density storage media relies on the existence of highly sensitive magnetic sensors with large magnetoresistance. Today almost all sensor technologies used in modern hard disk drives rely on tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) CoFeB-MgO-CoFeB structures. Though device fabrication is refined to meet satisfactory quality assurance demands, fundamental understanding of the refinement in terms of its effect on the nature of the interfaces and the MgO tunnel barrier leading to improved TMR is still missing. Where, the annealing condition required to improve the TMR ratio is itself not confirmatory its effect on the interface structure is highly debatable. In particular, it has been anticipated that under the proposed exotic conditions highly mobile B will move into the MgO barrier and will form boron oxide. In Chapter 4 we are able to shed definite insights to heart of this problem. We have used high energy photoemission to investigate a series of TMR structures and able to provide a systematic understanding of the driving mechanisms of B diffusion in CoFeBTMR structures. We have solved the mix-up of annealing temperature required and have shown that boron diffusion is limited merely to a sub-nanometer thick layer at the interface and does not progress beyond this point under typical conditions required for device fabrication. We have given a brief overview on the evolution of magnetic storage device and have described various concepts relevant for the study of such systems. The interface between two nonmagnetic insulators LaAlO3 and SrTiO3 has shown a variety of interface phenomena in the recent times. In spite of a large number of high profile studies on the interface LaAlO3 and SrTiO3 there is still a raging debate on the nature, origin and the distribution of the two dimensional electron gas that is supposed to be responsible for its exotic physical properties, ranging from unusual transport properties to its diverse ground states, such as metallic, magnetic and superconducting ones, depending on the specific synthesis. The polar discontinuity present across the SrTiO3-LaAlO3 interface is expected to result in half an electron transfer from the top of the LaAlO 3 layer to each TiofSrTiO3 at the interface, but, the extent of localization that can make it behave like delocalized with very high mobility as well as localized with magnetic moments is not yet clear. In Chapter 5 we have given a description of this highly interesting system as well as presented the outcome of our depth resolved XPS investigation on several such samples synthesized under different oxygen pressure. We were able to describe successfully the distribution of charge carriers. While synthesizing and understanding properties of nanoparticles is one issue, using them for device fabrication is another. For example, to make a certain device often requires specific arrangements of nanoparticles in a suitable substrate. Self-assembly formation can be a potential tool in these regards. Just like atom or ions, both nano and colloidal particles also assemble by themselves in ordered or disordered structure under certain conditions, e.g., the drying of a drop of suspension containing the colloid particles over a TEM grid. This phenomenon is known as self-assembly. Though, the process of assembly formation can be a very easy and cost-effective technique to manipulate the properties in the nano region, than the existing ones like lithography but, the lack of systematic study and poor understanding of these phenomena at microscopic level has led to a situation that, there is no precise information available in literature to say about the nature of such assembly. In Chapter 6 we have described experiments that eliminate the dependence of the self-assembly process on many complicating factors like substrate-particle interaction, substrate-solvent interaction etc., making the process of ordering governed by minimum numbers of experimental parameter that can be easily controlled. Under simplified conditions, our experiments unveil an interesting competition between ordering and jamming in drying colloid systems similar to glass transition phenomenon Resulting in the typical phase behavior of the particles. We establish a re-entrant behavior in the order-disorder phase diagram as a function of particle density such that there is an optimal range of particle density to realize the long-range ordering. The results are explained with the help of simulations and phenomenological theory. In summary, we were able to extend the idea of variable energy XPS to higher energy limit advantageous for investigating internal structure of nonmaterial of various dimensionalities and sizes. We were able to comprehend nature of buried interface indicating properties of heterostructures quantum dots and thin films. Our study revealed that depth resolved XPS combined with accessibility of high and variable energies at synchrotron centers can be a very general and effective tool for understanding buried interface. Finally, we have given insight to the mechanism of spontaneous ordering of nanoparticles over a suitable substrate.
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Sparta, Karine [Verfasser]. "Structural investigation of quaternary copper oxides with low dimensional magnetic properties / vorgelegt von Karine Sparta." 2003. http://d-nb.info/969757646/34.

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Röwer, Karine [Verfasser]. "Structural investigation of quaternary copper oxides with low dimensional magnetic properties / vorgelegt von Karine Sparta." 2003. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:hbz:82-opus-6782.

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Schmitt, Miriam. "Microscopic description of magnetic model compounds: from one-dimensional magnetic insulators to three-dimensional itinerant metals." Doctoral thesis, 2011. https://tud.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A26827.

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Abstract:
Solid state physics comprises many interesting physical phenomena driven by the complex interplay of the crystal structure, magnetic and orbital degrees of freedom, quantum fluctuations and correlation. The discovery of materials which exhibit exotic phenomena like low dimensional magnetism, superconductivity, thermoelectricity or multiferroic behavior leads to various applications which even directly influence our daily live. For such technical applications and the purposive modification of materials, the understanding of the underlying mechanisms in solids is a precondition. Nowadays DFT based band structure programs become broadly available with the possibility to calculate systems with several hundreds of atoms in reasonable time scales and high accuracy using standard computers due to the rapid technical and conceptional development in the last decades. These improvements allow to study physical properties of solids from their crystal structure and support the search for underlying mechanisms of different phenomena from microscopic grounds. This thesis focuses on the theoretical description of low dimensional magnets and intermetallic compounds. We combine DFT based electronic structure and model calculations to develop the magnetic properties of the compounds from microscopic grounds. The developed, intuitive pictures were challenged by model simulations with various experiments, probing microscopic and macroscopic properties, such as thermodynamic measurements, high field magnetization, nuclear magnetic resonance or electron spin resonance experiments. This combined approach allows to investigate the close interplay of the crystal structure and the magnetic properties of complex materials in close collaboration with experimentalists. In turn, the systematic variation of intrinsic parameters by substitution or of extrinsic factors, like magnetic field, temperature or pressure is an efficient way to probe the derived models. Especially pressure allows a continuous change of the crystal structure on a rather large energy scale without the chemical complexity of substitution, thus being an ideal tool to consistently alter the electronic structure in a controlled way. Our theoretical results not only provide reliable descriptions of real materials, exhibiting disorder, partial site occupation and/or strong correlations, but also predict fascinating phenomena upon extreme conditions. In parts this theoretical predictions were already confirmed by own experiments on large scale facilities. Whereas in the first part of this work the main purpose was to develop reliable magnetic models of low dimensional magnets, in the second part we unraveled the underlying mechanism for different phase transitions upon pressure. In more detail, the first part of this thesis is focused on the magnetic ground states of spin 1/2 transition metal compounds which show fascinating phase diagrams with many unusual ground states, including various types of magnetic order, like helical states exhibiting different pitch angles, driven by the intimate interplay of structural details and quantum fluctuations. The exact arrangement and the connection of the magnetically active building blocks within these materials determine the hybridization, orbital occupation, and orbital orientation, this way altering the exchange paths and strengths of magnetic interaction within the system and consequently being crucial for the formation of the respective ground states. The spin 1/2 transition metal compounds, which have been investigated in this work, illustrate the great variety of exciting phenomena fueling the huge interest in this class of materials. We focused on cuprates with magnetically active CuO4 plaquettes, mainly arranged into edge sharing geometries. The influence of structural peculiarities, as distortion, folding, changed bonding angles, substitution or exchanged ligands has been studied with respect to their relevance for the magnetic ground state. Besides the detailed description of the magnetic ground states of selected compounds, we attempted to unravel the origin for the formation of a particular magnetic ground state by deriving general trends and relations for this class of compounds. The details of the treatment of the correlation and influence of structural peculiarities like distortion or the bond angles are evaluated carefully. In the second part of this work we presented the results of joint theoretical and experimental studies for intermetallic compounds, all exhibiting an isostructural phase transition upon pressure. Many different driving forces for such phase transitions are known like quantum fluctuations, valence instabilities or magnetic ordering. The combination of extensive computational studies and high pressure XRD, XAS and XMCD experiments using synchrotron radiation reveals completely different underlying mechanism for the onset of the phase transitions in YCo5, SrFe2As2 and EuPd3Bx. This thesis demonstrates on a series of complex compounds that the combination of ab-initio electronic structure calculations with numerical simulations and with various experimental techniques is an extremely powerful tool for a successful description of the intriguing quantum phenomena in solids. This approach is able to reduce the complex behavior of real materials to simple but appropriate models, this way providing a deep understanding for the underlying mechanisms and an intuitive picture for many phenomena. In addition, the close interaction of theory and experiment stimulates the improvement and refinement of the methods in both areas, pioneering the grounds for more and more precise descriptions. Further pushing the limits of these mighty techniques will not only be a precondition for the success of fundamental research at the frontier between physics and chemistry, but also enables an advanced material design on computational grounds.:Contents List of abbreviations 1. Introduction 2. Methods 2.1. Electronic structure and magnetic models for real compounds 2.1.1. Describing a solid 2.1.2. Basic exchange and correlation functionals 2.1.3. Strong correlations 2.1.4. Band structure codes 2.1.5. Disorder and vacancies 2.1.6. Models on top of DFT 2.2. X-ray diffraction and x-ray absorption at extreme conditions 2.2.1. Diamond anvil cells 2.2.2. ID09 - XRD under pressure 2.2.3. ID24 - XAS and XMCD under pressure 3. Low dimensional magnets 3.1. Materials 3.1.1 AgCuVO4 - a model compound between two archetypes of Cu-O chains 3.1.2 Li2ZrCuO4 - in close vicinity to a quantum critical point 3.1.3 PbCuSO4(OH)2 -magnetic exchange ruled by H 3.1.4 CuCl2 and CuBr2 - flipping magnetic orbitals by crystal water 3.1.5 Na3Cu2SbO6 and Na2Cu2TeO6 - alternating chain systems 3.1.6 Cu2(PO3)2CH2 - magnetic vs. structural dimers 3.1.7 Cu2PO4OH - orbital order between dimers and chains 3.1.8 A2CuEO6 - an new family of spin 1/2 square lattice compounds 3.2. General trends and relations 3.2.1. Approximation for the treatment of strong correlation 3.2.2. Structural elements 4. Magnetic intermetallic compounds under extreme conditions 115 4.1. Itinerant magnets 4.1.1. YCo5 - a direct proof for a magneto elastic transition by XMCD 4.1.2. SrFe2As2 - symmetry-preserving lattice collapse 4.2. Localized magnets 4.2.1. EuPd3Bx - valence transition under doping and pressure 5. Summary and outlook A. Technical details B. Crystal Structures C. Supporting Material Bibliography List of Publications Acknowledgments
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Book chapters on the topic "Low-dimensional magnetic oxide"

1

Finazzi, Marco, Lamberto Duò, and Franco Ciccacci. "Low-Dimensional Antiferromagnetic Oxides: An Overview." In Magnetic Properties of Antiferromagnetic Oxide Materials, 1–23. Weinheim, Germany: Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9783527630370.ch1.

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Fischer, P., and M. Medarde. "Magnetic 2-D and 3-D Ordering Phenomena in Rare-Earth Based Copper-Oxide Superconductors and Related Systems." In Physics and Chemistry of Materials with Low-Dimensional Structures, 261–301. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-1284-8_7.

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Aharony, A., O. Entin-Wohlman, and A. B. Harris. "Low Dimensional Quantum Magnetism in the Copper Oxides." In Dynamical Properties of Unconventional Magnetic Systems, 281–305. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-4988-4_13.

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Reports on the topic "Low-dimensional magnetic oxide"

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Hill, Julienne Marie. Doping Experiments on Low-Dimensional Oxides and a Search for Unusual Magnetic Properties of MgAlB14. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/806588.

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