Paramagnetic resonance and susceptibility of ilmenite, FeTiO3 crystal
- 15 January 1991
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 69 (2) , 1104-1106
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.347379
Abstract
Large high‐purity single crystals of FeTiO3 with ilmenite structure have been grown from a stoichiometric melt of Fe2O3 and TiO2 under an inert atmosphere using the modified Czochralski technique. Susceptibility and x‐band paramagnetic resonance studies have been performed. Susceptibility measurements indicate a Néel temperature ∼59 K. The paramagnetic resonance spectrum for magnetic field perpendicular to the crystal c axis consists of a portion of a single, very intense approximately Lorentzian absorption line with its peak at about 600 G and half width at half maximum almost 1200 G. The absorption extends to zero magnetic field. For magnetic field approximately parallel to the c axis, the paramagnetic absorption is much smaller and may be considered a superposition of two approximately Lorentzian line shapes. The magnetic resonance measurements indicate a weak temperature dependence and large angular anisotropy.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neutron scattering study of magnetic excitations in oblique easy-axis antiferromagnet FeTiO3Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics, 1986
- Re-examination of the magnetic structure of FeTiO3Solid State Communications, 1986
- Coexistence of Ising- and XY-like magnons in FeTiO3Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, 1983
- On the obliqueness of the easy axis in collinear antiferromagnetic FeTiO3Solid State Communications, 1983
- Metamagnetic Phase Transitions in FeTiO3Journal of the Physics Society Japan, 1982
- Magnetic Resonance and Susceptibility of Several Ilmenite PowdersPhysical Review B, 1967
- Theory of the Magnetic Properties of the IlmenitesPhysical Review B, 1967
- Neutron-diffraction study of antiferromagnetic FeTi03 and its solid solutions with α-Fe2O3Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids, 1959