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Novel materials: smart and magnetic
by Staff Writers
Heidelberg, Germany (SPX) Jan 31, 2013


File image.

Novel, smart materials like shape memory alloys very often display so-called glass-like magnetism. Other smart materials with similar properties include those which, when exposed to a magnetic field, change their electrical resistance, known as manganites, or change their temperature, known as magnetocaloric materials.

Kaustav Mukherjee and his colleagues from the Consortium for Scientific Research Indore in India studied a key stage in the formation of such a magnetic glass material, called Pr0.5 Ca0.5 Mn0.975 Al0.025 O3, in a paper about to be published in EPJ B. They focused on the stage where 'water to ice' style transformation-referred to as first-order magnetic transformation- is arrested upon cooling.

This is a phenomenon dubbed kinetic arrest, corresponding to a temperature where the material undergoes a transition from a magnetic to a non-magnetic state, with the two phases competing with each other.Glass-like magnetic materials display fragile magnetic properties.

They draw their name from the similarity to the fragility observed in conventional, chemical glass. If a magnetic field is applied while the sample is cooled to what is referred to as its transition temperature, magnetisation of the sample increases and the material becomes magnetic.

However, the magnetisation continues to increase further with time, even if the magnetic field and temperature remain constant.The authors performed bulk measurements of magnetisation on powder samples of Pr0.5 Ca0.5 Mn0.975 Al0.025 O3, at the transition point between magnetic and non-magnetic states.

To do so, they simultaneously varied both the magnetic field and the temperature of the sample. They observed the formation of the kinetic arrest band and showed that it is inversely correlated with states reached at extremes of temperature described at supercooling and superheating bands.

They then established that the kinetic arrested state is different from the supercooled state.

K. Mukherjee, Kranti Kumar, A. Banerjee and P. Chaddah (2013), On the correlation between supercooling, superheating and kinetic arrest in a magnetic glass Pr0.5Ca0.5Mn0.975Al0.025O3, European Physical Journal B, DOI 10.1140/epjb/e2012-30748-y

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NIST's 'nanotubes on a chip' may simplify optical power measurements
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 29, 2013
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has demonstrated a novel chip-scale instrument made of carbon nanotubes that may simplify absolute measurements of laser power, especially the light signals transmitted by optical fibers in telecommunications networks. The prototype device, a miniature version of an instrument called a cryogenic radiometer, is a silicon chip topped ... read more


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