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Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic phase transitions and the magnetothermal properties of gadolinium

TLDR
A study of four Gd samples of different purities using ac susceptibility, magnetization, heat capacity, and direct measurements of the magnetocaloric effect in quasistatic and pulse magnetic fields revealed that all techniques yield the same value of the zero-field Curie temperature of 294(1) K as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
A study of four Gd samples of different purities using ac susceptibility, magnetization, heat capacity, and direct measurements of the magnetocaloric effect in quasistatic and pulse magnetic fields revealed that all techniques yield the same value of the zero-field Curie temperature of 294(1) K. The Curie temperature determined from inflection points of the experimental magnetic susceptibility and heat capacity is in excellent agreement with those obtained from the magnetocaloric effect and Arrot plots. Above 2 T the temperature of this transition increases almost linearly with the magnetic field at a rate of $\ensuremath{\sim}6\mathrm{K}/\mathrm{T}$ in fields up to 7.5 T. The spin reorientation transition, which occurs at 227(2) K in the absence of a magnetic field, has been confirmed by susceptibility, magnetization, and heat-capacity measurements. Magnetic fields higher than 2--2.5 T apparently quench the spin reorientation transition and Gd retains its simple ferromagnetic structure from the ${T}_{C}(H)$ down to $\ensuremath{\sim}4\mathrm{K}.$ The nature of anomaly at $T\ensuremath{\cong}132\mathrm{K},$ which is apparent from ac susceptibility measurements along the $c$ axis, is discussed. The presence of large amounts of interstitial impurities lowers the second-order $\mathrm{paramagnetic}\ensuremath{\leftrightarrow}\mathrm{ferromagnetic}$ transition temperature, and can cause some erroneous results in the magnetocaloric effect determined in pulsed magnetic fields. The magnetocaloric effect was studied utilizing the same samples by three experimental techniques: direct measurements of the adiabatic temperature rise, magnetization, and heat capacity. All three techniques, with one exception, yield the same results within the limits of experimental error.

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Magnetic-entropy change in Mn5Ge3−xSix alloys

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Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of a small amount of vacancy in both lanthanum and calcium on the physical properties of nanocrystalline La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 manganite

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Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of magnetization and magnetocaloric effect in amorphous FeZrMn ribbons

TL;DR: In this article, the magnetization properties of amorphous Fe90−xMnxZr10 (x=8 and 10) alloys were measured at temperatures above the Curie temperature in the paramagnetic region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetostructural coupling and magnetocaloric effect in Ni-Mn-Ga-Cu microwires

TL;DR: In this paper, the excellent magnetocaloric effect was revealed in Ni-Mn-Ga-Cu microwires produced by melt-extraction and subsequent annealing and the overlap of the martensitic and magnetic transformations, i.e., magnetostructural coupling, was achieved in the annealed microwires.
Journal ArticleDOI

Field dependence of magnetic entropy change : Whence comes an intercept?

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