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Journal ArticleDOI

Ordering in ferromagnets with random anisotropy.

TLDR
The temperature dependence of the (single-ion) random anisotropy strength can provide a plausible explanation for certain classes of reentrant phenomena and susceptibility cusps observed in magnetization studies.
Abstract
We summarize and extend our study (using real-space response and correlation functions) of the properties of a continuous-symmetry ferromagnet with random anisotropy, distinguishing between the cases of weak and strong random anisotropy. For the weak-anisotropy case we find three different magnetic regimes, according to the strength of the external magnetic field H. In zero H, the net magnetization is zero, although the ferromagnetic correlation length (FCL) is large. We call a ferromagnet in this first regime a correlated spin glass (CSG). It has a very large magnetic susceptibility, and hence a relatively small coherent anisotropy converts it into a nearly typical ferromagnetic domain structure. Also, a relatively small magnetic field nearly aligns the CSG, producing the second regime, which we call a ferromagnet with wandering axis (FWA). The FWA is a slightly noncollinear structure in which the tipping of the magnetization with respect to the field varies over the system. The tipping angle is correlated over a (field-dependent) correlation length which is smaller than the FCL of the CSG. As the field increases the correlation length in the FWA decreases, until the third regime is reached, wherein the tipping angles (which are smaller than in the FWA) are completely uncorrelated from site to site. We obtain the magnetization or susceptibility (as appropriate) for each of these three regimes. We also show that the temperature dependence of the (single-ion) random anisotropy strength can provide a plausible explanation for certain classes of reentrant phenomena and susceptibility cusps observed in magnetization studies. Neutron scattering studies appear to be consistent with the predicted ${H}^{\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}1/2}$ dependence of the FCL in the FWA regime, and display the expected rise of the FCL in the CSG regime as the random anisotropy strength decreases with increasing temperature.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Random anisotropy magnet at finite temperature

TL;DR: In this article , the authors present finite-temperature Monte Carlo studies of a 2D random-anisotropy (RA) magnet on lattices containing one million spins and describe freezing by introducing the time-dependent spin-glass order parameterq and the spin-melting timeτMdefined viaq=τM/tabove freezing, wheretis the time of the experiment represented by the number of Monte Carlo steps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetization Study of CoFeMnBSi Amorphous Alloys

TL;DR: In this paper, the magnetization of melt spun amorphous (Co 1-x Fe x ) 74 Mn 8 B 12 Si 6 alloys with 0 ≤ x ≤ 0.15 was studied and it was shown that the exchange interaction between the nearest neighbor T (T = Co, Fe and Mn) atoms is dominantly ferromagnetic.
Journal ArticleDOI

High field magnetisation studies in some rare earth based amorphous ribbons

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors carried out magnetisation studies at magnetic fields up to 20 T of melt spun amorphous Fe 72− x Y x Ho 8 B 20 alloys and extracted the local anisotropy from the coercivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-collinear ferromagnetic short range order in MgO decked multi-layered graphene

TL;DR: A careful magnetic study of MgO decked multi-layered graphene (MDMLG), synthesized by a combustion process that does not involve the use of graphite, permits an elaborate analysis of high-precision magnetization data to completely rule out the presence of a long-range ferromagnetic (FM) ordering at temperatures T ≥ 2.5 K.
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