Dynamic short-range order observed in the (Zn)[Fe2]O4 spinel by neutron diffraction, µSR, and Mössbauer experiments

HYPERFINE INTERACTIONS 97-98, 373 (1996)

W. Potzel, G.M. Kalvius, W. Schiessl, H. Karzel, M. Steiner, A. Kratzer, A. Martin, M.K. Krause, A. Schneider, I. Halevy, J. Gal, W. Schäfer, G. Will, M. Hillberg, R. Wäppling, D.W. Mitchell, and T.P. Das

Abstract

Using neutron diffraction (ND), muon-spin rotation/relaxation (µSR), and 57Fe-Mössbauer spectroscopy (MS) we have investigated magnetic properties of the normal spinel (Zn)[Fe2]O4. In compounds which are slowly cooled from 1200°C to room temperature inversion is below detection limits. At TN = 10.5 K the spinel exhibits long-range antiferromagnetic order (LRO). The transition as seen in thermal-scan spectra by MS is very sharp. However, ND and µSR experiments show that already at temperatures of ~ 10 TN a short-range antiferromagnetic ordering (SRO) develops which extends through ~ 70% of the sample volume just above TN. Below TN SRO and LRO exist. At 4.2 K still ~ 25% of the sample is short-range ordered. The regions over which the SRO extends have a sice of ~ 3 nm. Their fluctuation rates are in the GHz range. Modern ab initio cluster calculations successfully describe the magnetic hyperfine fields as well the electric field gradient (EFG) tensor at the Fe sites. Covalency of the Fe-O and Zn-O bonds is important. The physical origin of the regions exhibiting SRO, however, remains unresolved at this point.