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Single Crystal CoO
Analysis of the Magnetic Heat Capacity in Single Crystal CoO
The heat capacity is one of the few bulk physical properties amenable to theoretical modeling. The measured Cp
can be represented as the sum of various contributions depending upon
the nature of the material under study. With data of an appropriate
quality, one can obtain excellent fits of the theoretical models for
these contributions. Our on-going work on single CoO illustrates this
nicely. CoO is an interesting material because it has a magnetic
transition at a temperature that is comparable to the temperatures
needed to cause thermal excitation to excited crystal field states.
Most magnetic materials order at temperatures that are much lower than
the temperatures at which their excited electronic states become
populated. The heat capacity of CoO can be considered to be a sum of
three terms, the contributions from the lattice vibrations, the
magnetic transition, and the electronic excitations. Getting at the
magnetic contribution to the heat capacity is complicated by the need
to eliminate the electronic (Schottky) contribution from the measured
heat capacity as well as those of the lattice. The contributions of the
lattice vibrations and the electronic excitations can be modeled if the
vibrational and electronic energy levels are known from spectroscopic
studies. The results of one attempt at such a modeling are shown in the
figure below on the left, where the various contributions to Cpare
shown. To the right is the estimation of the magnetic contribution to
the heat capacity. Because this estimation gives a magnetic entropy
that is significantly higher than expected, we are trying other methods
to estimate the lattice heat capacity, since this is the most likely
culprit for the source of error. |
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Resolution Of The Experimental Heat Capacity Of Single Crystal CoO Into Its Components |
Magnetic Heat Capacity in Single Crystal CoO |