M. Kenzelmann
Paul Scherrer Institute
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Featured researches published by M. Kenzelmann.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
M. Kenzelmann; A. B. Harris; S. Jonas; C. Broholm; J. Schefer; S.B. Kim; S.-W. Cheong; O.P. Vajk; J. W. Lynn
TbMnO3 is an orthorhombic insulator where incommensurate spin order for temperature T(N)<41 K is accompanied by ferroelectric order for T<28 K. To understand this, we establish the magnetic structure above and below the ferroelectric transition using neutron diffraction. In the paraelectric phase, the spin structure is incommensurate and longitudinally modulated. In the ferroelectric phase, however, there is a transverse incommensurate spiral. We show that the spiral breaks spatial inversion symmetry and can account for magnetoelectricity in TbMnO3.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
G. Lawes; A. B. Harris; Tsuyoshi Kimura; N. Rogado; R. J. Cava; Amnon Aharony; O. Entin-Wohlman; T. Yildirim; M. Kenzelmann; C. Broholm; A. P. Ramirez
We show that long-range ferroelectric and incommensurate magnetic order appear simultaneously in a single phase transition in Ni3V2O8. The temperature and magnetic-field dependence of the spontaneous polarization show a strong coupling between magnetic and ferroelectric orders. We determine the magnetic symmetry using Landau theory for continuous phase transitions, which shows that the spin structure alone can break spatial inversion symmetry leading to ferroelectric order. This phenomenological theory explains our experimental observation that the spontaneous polarization is restricted to lie along the crystal b axis and predicts that the magnitude should be proportional to a magnetic order parameter.
Science | 2008
M. Kenzelmann; Th. Strässle; Ch. Niedermayer; Manfred Sigrist; B. Padmanabhan; M. Zolliker; A. D. Bianchi; R. Movshovich; Eric D. Bauer; J.L. Sarrao; Joe D. Thompson
Strong magnetic fluctuations can provide a coupling mechanism for electrons that leads to unconventional superconductivity. Magnetic order and superconductivity have been found to coexist in a number of magnetically mediated superconductors, but these order parameters generally compete. We report that close to the upper critical field, CeCoIn5 adopts a multicomponent ground state that simultaneously carries cooperating magnetic and superconducting orders. Suppressing superconductivity in a first-order transition at the upper critical field leads to the simultaneous collapse of the magnetic order, showing that superconductivity is necessary for the magnetic order. A symmetry analysis of the coupling between the magnetic order and the superconducting gap function suggests a form of superconductivity that is associated with a nonvanishing momentum.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
Owen Peter Vajk; M. Kenzelmann; J. W. Lynn; S. B. Kim; S.-W. Cheong
Hexagonal HoMnO3 is a frustrated antiferromagnet (T(N)=72 K) ferroelectric (T(C)=875 K) in which these two order parameters are coupled. Our neutron measurements of the spin-wave dispersion for the S=2 Mn3+ on the layered triangular lattice are well described by a two-dimensional nearest-neighbor Heisenberg exchange J=2.44 meV, and an anisotropy D that is 0.28 meV above the spin-reorientation transition at 40 K and 0.38 meV below. For H parallel c the magnetic structures and phase diagram have been determined, and reveal additional transitions below 8 K where the ferroelectrically displaced Ho3+ ions are ordered magnetically.
Physical Review Letters | 2006
Vivien Zapf; Zocco D; Hansen Br; M. Jaime; N. Harrison; Cristian D. Batista; M. Kenzelmann; Ch. Niedermayer; A. Lacerda; A. Paduan-Filho
It has recently been suggested that the organic compound NiCl2-4SC(NH2)2 (DTN) undergoes field-induced Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of the Ni spin degrees of freedom. The Ni S = 1 spins exhibit three-dimensional XY antiferromagnetism above a critical field H(c1) approximately 2 T. The spin fluid can be described as a gas of hard-core bosons where the field-induced antiferromagnetic transition corresponds to Bose-Einstein condensation. We have determined the spin Hamiltonian of DTN using inelastic neutron diffraction measurements, and we have studied the high-field phase diagram by means of specific heat and magnetocaloric effect measurements. Our results show that the field-temperature phase boundary approaches a power-law H - H(c1) proportional variant T(alpha)(c) near the quantum critical point, with an exponent that is consistent with the 3D BEC universal value of alpha = 1.5.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
M. Kenzelmann; G. Lawes; A. B. Harris; G. Gasparovic; C. Broholm; A. P. Ramirez; G.A. Jorge; M. Jaime; S. Park; Q. Huang; A.Y. Shapiro; L.A. Demianets
We report the first direct transition from a paramagnetic and paraelectric phase to an incommensurate multiferroic in the triangular lattice antiferromagnet RbFe(MoO4)(2). Ferroelectricity is observed only when the magnetic structure has chirality and breaks inversion symmetry. A Landau expansion of symmetry-allowed terms in the free energy demonstrates that chiral magnetic order can give rise to a pseudoelectric field, whose temperature dependence agrees with experiment.
Physical Review Letters | 2004
G. Lawes; M. Kenzelmann; N. Rogado; Kee Hoon Kim; G. A. Jorge; R. J. Cava; Amnon Aharony; O. Entin-Wohlman; A. B. Harris; T. Yildirim; Q. Huang; S. Park; C. Broholm; A. P. Ramirez
We present thermodynamic and neutron data on Ni3V2O8, a spin-1 system on a kagomé staircase. The extreme degeneracy of the kagomé antiferromagnet is lifted to produce two incommensurate phases at finite T--one amplitude modulated, the other helical--plus a commensurate canted antiferromagnet for T-->0. The H-T phase diagram is described by a model of competing first and second neighbor interactions with smaller anisotropic terms. Ni3V2O8 thus provides an elegant example of order from subleading interactions in a highly frustrated system.
Science | 2008
Andrea Bianchi; M. Kenzelmann; L. DeBeer-Schmitt; Jon S. White; E. M. Forgan; J. Mesot; M. Zolliker; J. Kohlbrecher; R. Movshovich; Eric D. Bauer; John L. Sarrao; Z. Fisk; Cedomir Petrovic; M. R. Eskildsen
Many superconducting materials allow the penetration of magnetic fields in a mixed state in which the superfluid is threaded by a regular lattice of Abrikosov vortices, each carrying one quantum of magnetic flux. The phenomenological Ginzburg-Landau theory, based on the concept of characteristic length scales, has generally provided a good description of the Abrikosov vortex lattice state. We conducted neutron-scattering measurements of the vortex lattice form factor in the heavy-fermion superconductor cerium-cobalt-indium (CeCoIn5) and found that this form factor increases with increasing field—opposite to the expectations within the Abrikosov-Ginzburg-Landau paradigm. We propose that the anomalous field dependence of the form factor arises from Pauli paramagnetic effects around the vortex cores and from the proximity of the superconducting state to a quantum critical point.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
J. S. White; Matthias Bator; Yanqing Hu; H. Luetkens; J. Stahn; S. Capelli; S. Das; Max Döbeli; Th. Lippert; Vivek Kumar Malik; J. Martynczuk; A. Wokaun; M. Kenzelmann; Ch. Niedermayer; C. W. Schneider
Single phase and strained LuMnO(3) thin films are discovered to display coexisting ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orders. A large moment ferromagnetism (≈1μ(B)), which is absent in bulk samples, is shown to display a magnetic moment distribution that is peaked at the highly strained substrate-film interface. We further show that the strain-induced ferromagnetism and the antiferromagnetic order are coupled via an exchange field, therefore demonstrating strained rare-earth manganite thin films as promising candidate systems for new multifunctional devices.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
I. Cabrera; M. Kenzelmann; G. Lawes; Yong P. Chen; Wangchun Chen; R. W. Erwin; Thomas R. Gentile; Juscelino B. Leao; J. W. Lynn; N. Rogado; R. J. Cava; C. Broholm
Electric control of multiferroic domains is demonstrated through polarized magnetic neutron diffraction. Cooling to the cycloidal multiferroic phase of Ni3V2O8 in an electric field E causes the incommensurate Bragg reflections to become neutron spin polarizing, the sense of neutron polarization reversing with E. Quantitative analysis indicates the E-treated sample has a handedness that can be reversed by E. We further show a close association between cycloidal and ferroelectric domains through E-driven spin and electric polarization hysteresis. We suggest that a definite cycloidal handedness is achieved through magnetoelastically induced Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions.