. Medical and Hospital News .




.
TIME AND SPACE
Neutron analysis reveals unique atom-scale behavior of cobalt blue
by Staff Writers
Oak Ridge TN (SPX) Sep 08, 2011

Just as cobalt blue's lustrous hue attracts artists and decorators, the antiferromagnetic properties of the responsible compound - cobalt aluminate - are attracting neutron scientists at DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Studies of magnetic interactions deep within the material's atomic structure may provide clues toward the development of energy-efficient technologies. (Light sconce image courtesy B. Jefferson Bolender)

Neutron scattering studies of "cobalt blue," a compound prized by artists for its lustrous blue hue, are revealing unique magnetic characteristics that could answer questions about mysterious properties in other materials.

Experiments at the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) and High Flux Isotope Reactor (HFIR), both located at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, indicate novel behaviors in the antiferromagnetic material cobalt aluminum oxide, - CoAl2O4, or cobalt aluminate - which researcher Gregory MacDougall of ORNL's Neutron Scattering Sciences Division describes as a "highly frustrated magnetic system."

"Frustrated" in this context refers to a condition where competing interactions between the magnetic spins within the atomic structure prevent the establishment of a long-range ordered state.

"Frustration is often associated with exotic behavior in materials, including piezoelectricity, multiferrocity, and high-temperature superconductivity, each of which is potentially important for future energy-efficient technologies," MacDougall said.

Antiferromagnetism is a type of magnetic order commonly found in materials below a certain temperature where the microscopic magnetic moments (often called "spins") on neighboring atoms align with their north and south poles oriented in opposite directions. Long-range antiferromagnetic order is technologically important for magnetic information storage.

The single-crystal experiments performed at ORNL showed the magnetic properties of cobalt aluminate exhibited drastic changes at the numbingly low temperature of 6.5 Kelvin. The experiments showed that effects from competing interactions may be responsible for its intriguing but poorly understood magnetic properties.

"Cobalt blue demonstrates behaviors that have never before been appreciated in a frustrated magnet, but have been seen in other materials," MacDougall said.

"Typically, frustration in the lattice from different energy scales and competing interactions drives the ordering temperature down. What we've found is, instead of eliminating ordering entirely, the long-range order is broken up into several small domains, in which the motion of the domain walls is frozen into place," MacDougall said.

Sharp walls separate those smaller atom-scale domains, set apart by the orientation of the atoms' magnetic spin. The result of freezing such walls into place is a glass-like behavior, normally indicative of highly disordered structure.

In cobalt aluminate's case, however, the glass-like behavior is exhibited on a very clean, ordered crystal. "We think this may explain unexpected glass-like behavior in other frustrated systems," MacDougall said.

The research, reported in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is part of a larger program to study magnetic frustration - what happens in magnetic systems when the geometry of the system or competing interactions frustrate or suppress the interactions that normally drive order, allowing novel behaviors to emerge.

"This is where you discover new physics," MacDougall said.

Cobalt aluminate is the compound responsible for cobalt blue, a vivid pigment used in paintings, colored glass and even to color concrete.

"In the past seven or eight years people have become interested in cobalt blue's magnetic properties because it turns out to be a prototypical system where competing interactions suppress magnetic order, and it is predicted to have novel ground states," MacDougall said.

The experiments were performed on two of HFIR's Triple Axis Spectrometers and the SNS's Cold Chopper Neutron Spectrometer (CNCS), making use of both thermal and "chilled", low-energy neutrons to study the cobalt aluminate at low, near absolute-zero temperatures. The single-crystal samples were fabricated in collaboration with ORNL's Correlated Electron Materials group.

MacDougall and colleagues used the triple-axis spectrometers at HFIR to study the ordering pattern of the cobalt blue lattice, which revealed the smaller domains forming at low temperatures.

With SNS's CNCS, the researchers were able to study how long-lengthscale perturbations in the magnetic ordered states, known as "spin-waves", moved through the system. The speed of those spin waves in different directions is a sensitive measure of the strength of the interactions between atoms in the cobalt blue system.

Related Links
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Understanding Time and Space




 

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



TIME AND SPACE
Digital quantum simulator realized
Innsbruck, Austria (SPX) Sep 06, 2011
Almost two years ago Rainer Blatt's and Christan Roos' research groups from the University of Innsbruck recreated the properties of a particle moving close to speed of light in a quantum system. They encoded the state of the particle into a highly cooled calcium atom and used lasers to manipulate it according to equations proposed by the famous quantum physicist Paul Dirac. Thereby, ... read more


TIME AND SPACE
Japan's new PM in crisis-hit Fukushima

Spain awards "heroes" of Japan nuclear disaster

Japan's ex-PM Kan feared 'uninhabitable Tokyo': report

Grim search after 31 die in Japan typhoon

TIME AND SPACE
Americans tap into location-based services: study

Northrop Grumman Business Unit Astro Aerospace Delivers Antennas to Lockheed Martin for GPS III

Researchers Improving GPS Accuracy In The Third Dimension

ASA Search and Rescue Software Used To Locate Capsized Boat Off Ireland

TIME AND SPACE
Ancient human DNA still with us

Culturomics 2 forecasts human behavior by supercomputing global news

Ancient humans were mixing it up

Two Brain Halves Just One Perception

TIME AND SPACE
In S.Africa poaching fight, chemical makes rhino horns toxic

Circadian clocks in a blind fish

Philippines catches 'largest crocodile on record'

Philippines creates haven for endangered duck

TIME AND SPACE
No sign Vietnam mutant bird flu greater threat: UN

Malaria discovery gives hope for new drugs and vaccines

Black Death confirmed as bubonic plague

Malaysia brushes off bird flu warning

TIME AND SPACE
China struggles to tame microblogging masses

Dalai Lama calls for more freedoms for Chinese

Chinese children suffocate on school buses: Xinhua

China censors Ai Weiwei's Newsweek essay

TIME AND SPACE
Cameroon ship attacked off Nigeria, captain taken

Gulf of Guinea pirates trigger alarm

Denmark to hand over 24 pirates to Kenya for trial

TIME AND SPACE
China inflation eases but still a challenge

Outside View: U.S. economy needs overhaul

Japan's current account surplus, machinery orders fall

Japan revises April-June GDP sharply down


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement