| Literature DB >> 27478090 |
Fanghua Tian1, Kaiyan Cao1, Yin Zhang1, Yuyang Zeng1, Rui Zhang1, Tieyan Chang1, Chao Zhou1, Minwei Xu1, Xiaoping Song1, Sen Yang1.
Abstract
A spontaneous exchange bias (SEB) discovered by Wang et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 106 (2011) 077203.] after zero-field cooling (ZFC) has attracted recent attention due to its interesting physics. In this letter, we report a giant SEB tuned by Sb-doping in Ni50Mn38Ga12-xSbx Heusler alloys. Such an SEB was switched on below the blocking temperature of approximately 50 K. The maximum exchange bias HE can arrive at 2930 Oe in a Ni50Mn38Ga10Sb2 sample after ZFC to 2 K. Further studies showed that this SEB was attributable to interaction of superspin glass (SSG) and antiferromagnetic matix, which was triggered by the crossover of SSG from canonical spin glass to a cluster spin glass. Our results not only explain the underlying physics of SEB, but also provide a way to tune and control the SEB performance.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27478090 PMCID: PMC4967862 DOI: 10.1038/srep30801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The magnetization temperature dependence [M(T)] curves measured at 200 Oe with sequences of ZFC and FC, respectively, (b) Temperature dependence of the real part of the ac susceptibility measured at different frequencies with an AC magnetic field of 2 Oe, the inset (b) shows the correlation between the angular frequency and the blocking temperature (). The frequency () dispersion behavior of temperature () conforms to the Vogel-Fulcher relationship. The arrows indicate the direction of increasing frequencies.
Parameter values obtained by fitting the experimental data to Equation (1).
| Samples | T0(K) | τ0(s) | Ea/KB(K) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 65.1 | 9.3 × 10−14 | 43.8 | canonical spin glass | |
| 90.3 | 8.7 × 10−12 | 72.5 | canonical spin glass | |
| 130.7 | 2.4 × 10−10 | 104.1 | cluster spin glass | |
| 140.4 | 5.3 × 10−9 | 158.4 | cluster spin glass | |
| 147.5 | 7.2 × 10−9 | 173.3 | cluster spin glass | |
| 151.9 | 2.1 × 10−8 | 191.7 | cluster spin glass | |
| 156.4 | 1.3 × 10−7 | 213.6 | cluster spin glass |
Figure 2(a–d) Magnetic hysteresis loops for Ni50Mn38Ga12-xSbx (x = 0, 2, 4, and 6) samples measured at 2 K after zero field cooling. (e) H and H dependent on the Sb content of Ni50Mn38Ga12-xSbx (x = 0–6) measured at 50 kOe after ZFC.
Figure 3(a) H (blue) and H (red) as a function of H in Ni50Mn38Ga10Sb2 at 2 K after ZFC. (b) H (black) and H (red) as a function of temperature in Ni50Mn38Ga10Sb2 after ZFC.
Figure 4(a) Training effect of sample Ni50Mn38Ga10Sb2. The inset shows enlarge of hysteresis loop. (b) Cycle dependence of HEB of the Ni50Mn38Ga10Sb2. The solid line shows the best fit of Equation (2) to the data for n > 1.
Figure 5(a) The martensitic transformation behavior of Ni50Mn38Ga10Sb2 measured with DSC at a cooling/heating rate 20 K/min. (b) Composition-temperature phase diagram of Ni50Mn38Ga12-x Sbx (x = 0–6) alloys. (c) Simplified schematic diagrams of the domain evolution embedded in an AFM single domain and hysteresis loops at different temperature.