Magnetic Properties of Dilute Gold-Vanadium Alloys: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance inand
- 10 July 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 183 (2) , 391-407
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrev.183.391
Abstract
The low-temperature (1-4°K) magnetic properties of dilute (0.1-10 at.%) alloys have been studied by means of pulsed-NMR techniques. The previously reported line-shape anomaly for vanadium concentrations near 1 at.% is shown to result from a large reduction in the vanadium spin susceptibility for vanadium impurities that are nearest neighbors to each other. The observed change in the resonance shift from a negative value (-1.5%) at low vanadium concentrations to a positive value (+0.6%) at high concentrations is consistent with the expected variation in the ratio of "nonmagnetic" to "magnetic" vanadium concentrations. The nuclear resonances are severely broadened as a result of oscillatory spindensity disturbances associated with -resonance scattering of the host conduction electrons. There is no indication, however, that the field-induced impurity magnetization gives rise to significant long-range negative-definite spin polarizations in the host metal as suggested recently. This conclusion is supported by the absence of positive resonance shifts in ternary alloys containing up to 20 at.% silver. In general, our measurements suggest that "magnetic" as well as "nonmagnetic" vanadium sites can be described by a virtual bound -state model in which the impurity susceptibility, resonance shift, and nuclear-spin relaxation rates are enhanced by local Coulomb interactions. The two types of vanadium sites are distinguished by different enhancement factors, or, equivalently, different spin-fluctuation frequencies. The spin-lattice relaxation rates are directly proportional to the absolute temperature over the entire composition range. In the infinite-dilution limit msec°K, while at high concentrations approaches the metallic vanadium value. An analysis of the infinite-dilution shift and relaxation-rate data indicates that the impurity-site spin susceptibility accounts for most of the measured bulk susceptibility.
Keywords
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