Publication:
Evidence of a Griffiths phase in a mixed compound of YFe2 and YFe3

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Experimental evidence of a Griffiths phase is still a challenging topic in condensed matter physics. We show that a mixed compound of YFe2 and YFe3 is an archetype example of Griffiths-like behavior. We report magnetization measurements carried out on the intermetallic mixed compound of YFe2 and YFe3 in the temperature range of 10-1000 K and using magnetic fields up to 23 T. The low-field dc magnetic susceptibility (chi = M/H) showed a thermomagnetic irreversibility effect below the Curie temperatures, T-C = 526 K for YFe3 and T-C = 545 K for YFe2. Specifically, we found that upon field-cooling (FC), the magnetization increased gradually with decreasing temperature and then reached a saturation value at a critical temperature. In contrast, the zero-FC measurements showed a much more complicated behavior. This behavior has been interpreted in terms of two canted sublattices coupled ferromagnetically. Furthermore, for temperatures above T-C, the inverse susceptibility, chi(-1), shows a clear downturn, exhibiting non-universal behavior for magnetic fields up to 1 T. This anomaly is characteristic of non-universal Griffiths like behavior. Using the equation for the magnetic susceptibility for the Griffiths phase, chi(-1) = C(T - T-CM)(1-lambda), we obtained the non-universal prefactor exponent, lambda, and the other fitting parameter for each measuring field. The isothermal magnetization curve at Curie temperature, T-C = 545 K obeys perfectly M similar to H-alpha, from which the critical exponent alpha = 1/delta is determined accurately. All these results closely follow the predictions for Griffiths phase. In our scenerio, the YFe3 regions (T-C = 526 K) distributed homogeneously in the matrix are quenched by the demagnetizing fields of YFe2 (T-C = 545 K) as the temperature increases, leading to ordered Fe regions, which in turn cause the Griffiths effect. (C) 2013 American Institute of Physics.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By