Nuclear-Magnetic-Resonance Measurements in the Rare-Earth Group-Intermetallic Compounds
- 10 April 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 180 (2) , 455-475
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrev.180.455
Abstract
The temperature dependences, signs, and magnitudes of the phosphorus, arsenic, antimony, and bismuth nuclear-magnetic-resonance (NMR) Knight shifts in the NaCl-type rare-earth group- intermetallic compounds have been studied in detail for the temperature range of 1.5-600°K. The Knight shifts in the nonmagnetic compounds, such as LaP, were found to be temperature-independent. For most of the magnetic compounds, such as GdP, the temperature-dependent part of the Knight shift was found to obey a Curie-Weiss law. However, for the praseodymium, samarium, and thulium compounds, the effect of the sixfold cubic crystal-field interaction on the rare-earth ion could not be neglected. An analysis, showing the relationship between the Knight shift and the rare-earth paramagnetic susceptibility , is presented. In this manner, it is shown that detailed information about can be derived from an analysis of the NMR data. Furthermore, it is shown that the hyperfine field at the nonmagnetic site in these compounds arises from the spin component S of the total angular momentum J of the rare-earth ion, and not from the magnetization at the rare-earth site. The exchange energies for these compounds were calculated using the uniform conduction-electron spin-polarization model for the Knight shift. For the rare-earth Group- intermetallic compounds, was found to be negative (antiferromagnetic) and relatively constant (≃ -0.3 eV) for all of these compounds. Comparisons are made for the exchange energies for all of the various rare-earth intermetallic compounds for which NMR measurements are available. It is again found that is negative and relatively constant in magnitude. For all of these compounds, the total hyperfine field per unit spin is found to be of the order of -50 kOe. No explanation for this phenomenon is advanced. It is shown that a consistent analysis of the Knight-shift data in terms of the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida theory is probably impossible. The NMR linewidths in the nonmagnetic compounds were found to be in agreement with the calculated dipolar contribution, while for the magnetic compounds, the NMR linewidth was found to be due to the presence of demagnetization fields arising from the nonspherical shape of the particles in the powdered samples.
Keywords
This publication has 73 references indexed in Scilit:
- Knight Shifts ofin the Carbides of Uranium and ThoriumPhysical Review B, 1968
- Sign of the Nearest-Neighbor Exchange Interaction and its Derivative in GdAsPhysical Review B, 1967
- Nuclear Magnetic Resonance in the Paramagnetic State of UPPhysical Review B, 1967
- Phosphorus Nuclear Magnetic Resonance in Transition-Metal Monophosphides: MnP,, RuP, and WPPhysical Review B, 1967
- Hyperfine Interactions in the Ground State and 22-keV State ofin Ferrimagnetic Compounds of SamariumPhysical Review B, 1965
- Self-Diffusion and Nuclear Quadrupolar Relaxation in fcc Lanthanum MetalPhysical Review B, 1964
- Effective Magnetic Field and Gradient of Electric Field Acting on the Nucleus of Eu in Europium Iron GarnetPhysical Review B, 1963
- Nuclear Magnetic Resonance in UPhysical Review B, 1962
- Nuclear Magnetic Resonance ofPhysical Review B, 1962
- Nuclear Magnetic Resonance in Metals. I. Broadening of Absorption Lines by Spin-Lattice InteractionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1952