Publications by authors named "L Ghivelder"

Below 42 K, the homometallic CoOBO ludwigite forms magnetic planes separated by nonmagnetic low-spin Co ions. The substitution of Co by other nonmagnetic ions enhances the magnetic interactions, raising the magnetic ordering temperature. However, depending on the nonmagnetic dopant ion, the remaining Co ions could adopt a high-spin state, creating magnetic frustration and lowering the magnetic transition temperature.

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Vortex matter in layered high-[Formula: see text] superconductors, including iron-pnictides, undergo several thermodynamic phase transitions due to the complex interplay of pinning energy, thermal energy and elastic energy. Moreover, the presence of anisotropy makes their vortex physics even more intriguing. Here, we report a detailed vortex dynamics study, using dc magnetization measurements, in a triclinic iron-pnictide superconductor (Ca[Formula: see text]La[Formula: see text])[Formula: see text](Pt[Formula: see text]As[Formula: see text])(Fe[Formula: see text]As[Formula: see text])[Formula: see text], with a superconducting transition temperature, T[Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] 31 K.

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We performed magnetization measurements in a single crystal of the anisotropic bilayer pnictide superconductor KCa[Formula: see text]Fe[Formula: see text]As[Formula: see text]F[Formula: see text], with [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] 34 K, for [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text]-axis and [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text]-planes. A second magnetization peak (SMP) was observed in the isothermal M(H) curves measured below 16 K for [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text]-planes. A peak in the temperature variation of the critical current density, [Formula: see text](T), at 16 K, strongly suggests the emergence of Josephson vortices at lower temperatures, which leads to the SMP in the sample.

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Controlling magnetism with electric field directly or through strain-driven piezoelectric coupling remains a key goal of spintronics. Here, we demonstrate that giant piezomagnetism, a linear magneto-mechanic coupling effect, is manifest in antiperovskite MnNiN, facilitated by its geometrically frustrated antiferromagnetism opening the possibility of new memory device concepts. Films of MnNiN with intrinsic biaxial strains of ±0.

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