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Dive into the research topics where A. T. Boothroyd is active.

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Featured researches published by A. T. Boothroyd.


Science | 2009

Magnetic Coulomb Phase in the Spin Ice Ho2Ti2O7

Timothy Fennell; P. P. Deen; Andrew Wildes; K. Schmalzl; D. Prabhakaran; A. T. Boothroyd; Robert J. Aldus; D. F. McMorrow; Steven T. Bramwell

Magnetic Monopoles Magnets come with a north and a south pole. Despite being predicted to exist, searches in astronomy and in high-energy particle physics experiments for magnetic monopoles (either north or south on their own) have defied observation. Theoretical work in condensed-matter systems has predicted that spin-ice structures may harbor such elusive particles (see the Perspective by Gingras). Fennell et al. (p. 415, published online 3 September) and Morris et al. (p. 411, published online 3 September) used polarized neutron scattering to probe the spin structure forming in two spin-ice compounds—Ho2Ti2O7 and Dy2Ti2O7—and present results in support of the presence of magnetic monopoles in both materials. Neutron scattering measurements on two spin-ice compounds show evidence for magnetic monopoles. Spin-ice materials are magnetic substances in which the spin directions map onto hydrogen positions in water ice. Their low-temperature magnetic state has been predicted to be a phase that obeys a Gauss’ law and supports magnetic monopole excitations: in short, a Coulomb phase. We used polarized neutron scattering to show that the spin-ice material Ho2Ti2O7 exhibits an almost perfect Coulomb phase. Our result proves the existence of such phases in magnetic materials and strongly supports the magnetic monopole theory of spin ice.


Nature | 2007

Patterning of sodium ions and the control of electrons in sodium cobaltate

M. Roger; D. J. P. Morris; D. A. Tennant; M. J. Gutmann; J. P. Goff; J.-U. Hoffmann; R. Feyerherm; E. Dudzik; D. Prabhakaran; A. T. Boothroyd; Nic Shannon; B. Lake; P. P. Deen

Sodium cobaltate (NaxCoO2) has emerged as a material of exceptional scientific interest due to the potential for thermoelectric applications, and because the strong interplay between the magnetic and superconducting properties has led to close comparisons with the physics of the superconducting copper oxides. The density x of the sodium in the intercalation layers can be altered electrochemically, directly changing the number of conduction electrons on the triangular Co layers. Recent electron diffraction measurements reveal a kaleidoscope of Na+ ion patterns as a function of concentration. Here we use single-crystal neutron diffraction supported by numerical simulations to determine the long-range three-dimensional superstructures of these ions. We show that the sodium ordering and its associated distortion field are governed by pure electrostatics, and that the organizational principle is the stabilization of charge droplets that order long range at some simple fractional fillings. Our results provide a good starting point to understand the electronic properties in terms of a Hubbard hamiltonian that takes into account the electrostatic potential from the Na superstructures. The resulting depth of potential wells in the Co layer is greater than the single-particle hopping kinetic energy and as a consequence, holes preferentially occupy the lowest potential regions. Thus we conclude that the Na+ ion patterning has a decisive role in the transport and magnetic properties.


Nature Materials | 2013

A ferroelectric-like structural transition in a metal

Youguo Shi; Yanfeng Guo; Xia Wang; Andrew Princep; Dmitry D. Khalyavin; Pascal Manuel; Yuichi Michiue; Akira Sato; Kenji Tsuda; S. Yu; Masao Arai; Yuichi Shirako; Masaki Akaogi; N. L. Wang; Kazunari Yamaura; A. T. Boothroyd

Metals cannot exhibit ferroelectricity because static internal electric fields are screened by conduction electrons, but in 1965, Anderson and Blount predicted the possibility of a ferroelectric metal, in which a ferroelectric-like structural transition occurs in the metallic state. Up to now, no clear example of such a material has been identified. Here we report on a centrosymmetric (R3c) to non-centrosymmetric (R3c) transition in metallic LiOsO3 that is structurally equivalent to the ferroelectric transition of LiNbO3 (ref. 3). The transition involves a continuous shift in the mean position of Li(+) ions on cooling below 140 K. Its discovery realizes the scenario described in ref. 2, and establishes a new class of materials whose properties may differ from those of normal metals.


Physical Review B | 2010

Tuning the superconducting and magnetic properties of Fe y Se 0.25 Te 0.75 by varying the iron content

M. Bendele; P. Babkevich; S. Katrych; S. N. Gvasaliya; E. Pomjakushina; K. Conder; B. Roessli; A. T. Boothroyd; R. Khasanov; H. Keller

The superconducting and magnetic properties of FeySe0.25Te0.75 single crystals (0.9≤y≤1.1) were studied by means of x-ray diffraction, superconducting quantum interference device magnetometry, muon-spin rotation, and elastic neutron diffraction. The samples with y<1 exhibit coexistence of bulk superconductivity and incommensurate magnetism. The magnetic order remains incommensurate for y≥1 but with increasing Fe content superconductivity is suppressed and the magnetic correlation length increases. The results show that the superconducting and the magnetic properties of the FeySe1−xTex can be tuned not only by varying the Se/Te ratio but also by changing the Fe content. ©2010 The American Physical Society


Nature Materials | 2013

Suppression of thermal conductivity by rattling modes in thermoelectric sodium cobaltate

D. J. Voneshen; Keith Refson; E. Borissenko; M. Krisch; A. Bosak; A. Piovano; E. Cemal; M. Enderle; Matthias J. Gutmann; M. Hoesch; M. Roger; L. Gannon; A. T. Boothroyd; S. Uthayakumar; D. G. Porter; J. P. Goff

The need for both high electrical conductivity and low thermal conductivity creates a design conflict for thermoelectric systems, leading to the consideration of materials with complicated crystal structures. Rattling of ions in cages results in low thermal conductivity, but understanding the mechanism through studies of the phonon dispersion using momentum-resolved spectroscopy is made difficult by the complexity of the unit cells. We have performed inelastic X-ray and neutron scattering experiments that are in remarkable agreement with our first-principles density-functional calculations of the phonon dispersion for thermoelectric Na(0.8)CoO2, which has a large-period superstructure. We have directly observed an Einstein-like rattling mode at low energy, involving large anharmonic displacements of the sodium ions inside multi-vacancy clusters. These rattling modes suppress the thermal conductivity by a factor of six compared with vacancy-free NaCoO2. Our results will guide the design of the next generation of materials for applications in solid-state refrigerators and power recovery.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Femtosecond Dynamics of the Collinear-to-Spiral Antiferromagnetic Phase Transition in CuO

S. L. Johnson; R. A. De Souza; U. Staub; P. Beaud; E. Möhr-Vorobeva; G. Ingold; A. Caviezel; V. Scagnoli; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; O. Krupin; W. S. Lee; Yi-De Chuang; L. Patthey; R. G. Moore; D. H. Lu; M. Yi; Patrick S. Kirchmann; M. Trigo; Peter Denes; Dionisio Doering; Z. Hussain; Zhi-Xun Shen; D. Prabhakaran; A. T. Boothroyd

We report on the ultrafast dynamics of magnetic order in a single crystal of CuO at a temperature of 207 K in response to strong optical excitation using femtosecond resonant x-ray diffraction. In the experiment, a femtosecond laser pulse induces a sudden, nonequilibrium increase in magnetic disorder. After a short delay ranging from 400 fs to 2 ps, we observe changes in the relative intensity of the magnetic ordering diffraction peaks that indicate a shift from a collinear commensurate phase to a spiral incommensurate phase. These results indicate that the ultimate speed for this antiferromagnetic reorientation transition in CuO is limited by the long-wavelength magnetic excitation connecting the two phases.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Ferromagnetic In-Plane Spin Fluctuations in Na~xCoO~2 Observed by Neutron Inelastic Scattering

A. T. Boothroyd; R. Coldea; D. A. Tennant; D. Prabhakaran; L. M. Helme; C.D. Frost

We present neutron scattering spectra taken from a single crystal of Na0.75CoO2, the precursor to a novel cobalt-oxide superconductor. The data contain a prominent inelastic signal at low energies ( approximately 10 meV), which is localized in wave vector about the origin of two-dimensional reciprocal space. The signal is highly dispersive, and decreases in intensity with increasing temperature. We interpret these observations as direct evidence for the existence of ferromagnetic spin fluctuations within the cobalt-oxygen layers.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Photoinduced Melting of Antiferromagnetic Order in La0.5Sr1.5MnO4 Measured Using Ultrafast Resonant Soft X-Ray Diffraction

Henri P. Ehrke; Ra'anan Tobey; Simon Wall; S. A. Cavill; Michael Först; Vikaran Khanna; Thomas Garl; N. Stojanovic; D. Prabhakaran; A. T. Boothroyd; M. Gensch; Alessandro Mirone; P. Reutler; A. Revcolevschi; S. S. Dhesi; Andrea Cavalleri

We used ultrafast resonant soft x-ray diffraction to probe the picosecond dynamics of spin and orbital order in La(0.5)Sr(1.5)MnO(4) after photoexcitation with a femtosecond pulse of 1.5 eV radiation. Complete melting of antiferromagnetic spin order is evidenced by the disappearance of a (1/4,1/4,1/2) diffraction peak. On the other hand, the (1/4,1/4,0) diffraction peak, reflecting orbital order, is only partially reduced. We interpret the results as evidence of destabilization in the short-range exchange pattern with no significant relaxation of the long-range Jahn-Teller distortions. Cluster calculations are used to analyze different possible magnetically ordered states in the long-lived metastable phase. Nonthermal coupling between light and magnetism emerges as a primary aspect of photoinduced phase transitions in manganites.


Physical Review B | 2009

Coexistence of incommensurate magnetism and superconductivity in Fe 1 + y Se x Te 1 − x

Rustem Khasanov; M. Bendele; A. Amato; P. Babkevich; A. T. Boothroyd; A. Cervellino; K. Conder; S. N. Gvasaliya; H. Keller; H.-H. Klauss; H. Luetkens; V. Pomjakushin; E. Pomjakushina; B. Roessli

We have studied the superconducting and magnetic properties of


Science | 2011

Observation of Orbital Currents in CuO

V. Scagnoli; U. Staub; Y. Bodenthin; R. A. De Souza; M. García-Fernández; M. Garganourakis; A. T. Boothroyd; D. Prabhakaran; S. W. Lovesey

{\text{Fe}}_{1+y}{\text{Se}}_{x}{\text{Te}}_{1\ensuremath{-}x}

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D. F. McMorrow

London Centre for Nanotechnology

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R. A. Ewings

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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P. G. Freeman

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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H. C. Walker

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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T. G. Perring

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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S. B. Wilkins

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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