
Magnetism loses under pressure
Date: Tuesday, January 29, 2008 @ 19:58:53 UTC Topic: Science
Scientists have discovered that the magnetic strength of magnetite—the
most abundant magnetic mineral on Earth—declines drastically when put
under pressure. Researchers from the Carnegie Institution’s Geophysical
Laboratory, together with colleagues at the Advanced Photon Source of
Argonne National Laboratory, have found that when magnetite is
subjected to pressures between 120,000 and 160,000 times atmospheric
pressure its magnetic strength declines by half. They discovered that
the change is due to what is called electron spin pairing.
Magnetism comes from unpaired
electrons in magnetic materials. The strength of a magnet is a result
of the spin of unpaired electrons and how the spins of different
electrons are aligned with one another. This research showed that the
drop in magnetism was due to a decrease in the number of unpaired
electrons.
“Magnetite is found in small quantities in certain bacteria, in
brains of some birds and insects, and even in humans,” commented Yang
Ding, the study’s lead author with the Carnegie-led High-Pressure
Synergetic Consortium. “Early navigators used it to find the magnetic
North Pole and birds use it for their navigation. And now it is used in
nanotechnology. There is intense scientific interest in its properties.
Understanding the behavior of magnetite is difficult because the strong
interaction among its electrons complicates its electronic structure
and magnetic properties.”
To study the mineral, the researchers developed and applied a novel
technique, called X-ray Magnetic Circular Dichroism (XMCD) at the
Advanced Photon Source, a high-energy synchrotron facility. The
technique uses high-brilliance circularly polarized X-rays to probe the
magnetic state of magnetite as a diamond anvil cell subjects a sample
to many hundreds of thousands of atmospheres. The researchers combined
their experimental results with theoretical calculations by
collaborators to pinpoint why the magnetic strength changes. The study,
to be published in February in Physical Review Letters, reveals the electron-spin configuration in the iron sites of the mineral to be the origin of the phenomenon.
This discovery not only shows
the profound effects of pressure on magnetism, it also discloses, for
the first time, that pressure induced a spin pairing transition that
results in changes in the electron mobility and structure.
“The discovery is important,” Ding said. “It advances our
understanding of the correlation of magnetism, electron transport, and
structural stability in materials with strong electron interactions,
like magnetite.”
Source: Carnegie Institution Via: http://www.physorg.com/news120842264.html
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