Low-temperature properties of single-crystal CrB2

Abstract

We report the low-temperature properties of 11B-enriched single-crystal CrB2 as prepared from high-purity Cr and B powder by a solid-state reaction and optical float zoning. The electrical resistivity, xx, Hall effect, xy, and specific heat, C, are characteristic of an exchange-enhanced Fermi liquid ground state, which develops a slightly anisotropic spin gap ≈ 220\, K below T N=88\, K. This observation is corroborated by the absence of a Curie dependence in the magnetization for T0 reported in the literature. Comparison of C with d xx/dT, where we infer lattice contributions from measurements of VB2, reveals strong antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations with a characteristic spin fluctuation temperature T sf≈ 257\, K in the paramagnetic state, followed by a pronounced second-order mean-field transition at T N, and unusual excitations around ≈ T N/2. The pronounced anisotropy of xx above T N is characteristic of an easy-plane anisotropy of the spin fluctuations consistent with the magnetization. The ratio of the Curie-Weiss to the Neel temperatures, f=- CW/T N≈ 8.5, inferred from the magnetization, implies strong geometric frustration. All physical properties are remarkably invariant under applied magnetic fields up to 14\,\, T, the highest field studied. In contrast to earlier suggestions of local-moment magnetism our study identifies CrB2 as a weak itinerant antiferromagnet par excellence with strong geometric frustration.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…