Emergent Magnetic Moments Produced by Self-Damage in Plutonium
Plutonium possesses the most complicated phase diagram in the periodic table, driven by the complexities of overlapping 5f electron orbitals. Despite the importance of the 5f electrons in defining the structure and physical properties, there is no experimental evidence that these electrons localize...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2006-11, Vol.103 (46), p.17179-17183 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Plutonium possesses the most complicated phase diagram in the periodic table, driven by the complexities of overlapping 5f electron orbitals. Despite the importance of the 5f electrons in defining the structure and physical properties, there is no experimental evidence that these electrons localize to form magnetic moments in pure Pu. Instead, a large temperature-independent Pauli susceptibility indicates that they form narrow conduction bands. Radiation damage from the α-particle decay of Pu creates numerous defects in the crystal structure, which produce a significant temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility, χ(T), in both α-Pu and δ-Pu (stabilized by 4.3 atomic percent Ga). This effect can be removed by thermal annealing above room temperature. By contrast, below 35 K the radiation damage is frozen in place, permitting the evolution in χ(T) with increasing damage to be studied systematically. This result leads to a two-component model consisting of a Curie-Weiss term and a short-ranged interaction term consistent with disorder-induced local moment models. Thus, it is shown that self-damage creates localized magnetic moments in previously nonmagnetic plutonium. |
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ISSN: | 0027-8424 1091-6490 |
DOI: | 10.1073/pnas.0608552103 |