Magnetic properties of a non-centrosymmetric polymorph of FeCl3†
Abstract
The growth of single crystals of FeCl3, through sublimation and from the melt, is presented alongside a thorough investigation of their magnetostructural properties through a combination of DC magnetization and AC magnetic susceptibility measurements, single crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD), neutron powder diffraction (NPD) and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). A new chiral polymorph of FeCl3 is identified, crystallizing in the non-centrosymmetric space group P31. NPD and SANS reveal that a weakly first-order magnetic phase transition occurs from a paramagnetic phase with significant short-range correlations to an antiferromagnetic phase at TN = 8.6 K, best described by the magnetic propagation vector k = (1/2, 0, 1/3) which differs from the previously reported magnetic structure of the well-known centrosymmetric polymorph (space group R![[3 with combining macron]](https://www.rsc.org/images/entities/char_0033_0304.gif) ). We show that disordered crystallographic models including a large number of stacking faults are required to accurately reproduce the scattering observed in NPD patterns, preventing full determination of the magnetic structure. The magnetic field and temperature-dependent behavior of the intensities of the k = (1/2, 0, 2/3) and (1/2, 0, 5/3) magnetic Bragg peaks measured by SANS suggest that a field-induced spin reorientation occurs at H = 40 kOe when H‖c-axis and at a significantly lower field of H ≈ 25 kOe when H⊥c-axis. Above these magnetic fields in both cases the spins lie predominantly in the basal plane. The long-range magnetic ordering and the field-induced transitions observed in the neutron scattering experiments coincide with anomalies observed in the magnetisation versus both temperature and applied field along the principal crystal directions.
). We show that disordered crystallographic models including a large number of stacking faults are required to accurately reproduce the scattering observed in NPD patterns, preventing full determination of the magnetic structure. The magnetic field and temperature-dependent behavior of the intensities of the k = (1/2, 0, 2/3) and (1/2, 0, 5/3) magnetic Bragg peaks measured by SANS suggest that a field-induced spin reorientation occurs at H = 40 kOe when H‖c-axis and at a significantly lower field of H ≈ 25 kOe when H⊥c-axis. Above these magnetic fields in both cases the spins lie predominantly in the basal plane. The long-range magnetic ordering and the field-induced transitions observed in the neutron scattering experiments coincide with anomalies observed in the magnetisation versus both temperature and applied field along the principal crystal directions.
- This article is part of the themed collection: In Honor of Professor Thom Palstra
 
                




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