CME Seminar Announcement: Stephen Hill, 3/23/17
Gardner, Joanna D.
gardner.306 at osu.edu
Mon Mar 20 09:35:29 EDT 2017
Good Afternoon,
Please join us for a Condensed Matter Experiment Seminar presented by Professor Stephen Hill<http://magnet.fsu.edu/~shill/> from Florida State University on Thursday, March 23rd at 11:30am in 1080 Smith Seminar, PRB. Learn more about Dr. Hill’s seminar topic, "Controlled Under Pressure: Understanding Spin Orbit Coupling and Exchange Anisotropy in Organic Magnets" below. Thank you and we look forward to seeing you there!
Abstract
Application of pressure offers an attractive means for studying structure/property relations in molecule-based materials, where small changes in coordination environment around a magnetic atom can produce quite dramatic variations in both the on-site spin-orbit anisotropy as well as the exchange interactions between such atoms when assembled into clusters or 3D networks. This has spurred the integration of high-pressure sample environments into a range of measurement capabilities. In addition to structural data, the ability to obtain spectroscopic information concerning the unpaired electrons that give rise to magnetic properties is particularly desirable. This seminar will begin with a brief description of the development and application of methods enabling electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of oriented single-crystal samples subjected to hydrostatic pressures of up to 3.5 GPa. After an introductory example, the remainder of the talk will focus on a family of heavy atom organic radical ferromagnets (containing S and Se heteroatoms) that hold records for both the highest transition temperature and coercivity (for purely organic magnets). The latter is the result of an unexpectedly high magnetic anisotropy, attributable to spin-orbit-mediated exchange (hopping) processes [1,2]. Ferromagnetic resonance measurements reveal a continuous increase in anisotropy with increasing pressure in the all-Se compound, attributable to increases in orbital overlap that, in turn, increases the exchange anisotropy [2,3]. First principles calculations provide excellent agreement with experiment. These findings emphasize the important role of spin-orbit coupling in a range of organics where this effect is usually considered to be weak.
Collaboration with K. Thirunavukkuarasu (NHMFL), S. Winter and R. Oakley (Waterloo).
[1] Winter et al., Phys. Rev. B 85, 094430 (2012).
[2] Winter et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 137, 3720 (2015).
[3] Thirunavukkuarasu et al., Phys. Rev. B 91, 014412 (2015).
Sincerely,
Joanna
[The Ohio State University]
Joanna Gardner
Program Coordinator
College of Arts and Sciences Physics
2021 Physics Research Building, 191 W Woodruff Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210
614-292-3437 Office
gardner.306 at osu.edu<mailto:gardner.306 at osu.edu> osu.edu<http://osu.edu>
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