(Redirected from Antiferromagnet)
Antiferromagnetic ordering
In materials that exhibit 'antiferromagnetism', the spins of
electrons align in a regular pattern with neighboring
spins pointing in opposite directions. This is a different manifestation of
magnetism. Generally, antiferromagnetic materials exhibit antiferromagnetism at a low temperature, and become disordered above a certain temperature; the transition temperature is called the
Néel temperature. Above the Néel temperature, the material is typically
paramagnetic.
The antiferromagnetic behaviour at low temperature usually results in
diamagnetic properties, but can sometimes display
ferrimagnetic behaviour, which in many physically observable properties is more similar to ferromagnetic interactions.
The magnetic susceptibility of an antiferromagnetic material will appear to go through a maximum as the temperature is lowered; in contrast, that of a
paramagnet will continually increase with decreasing temperature.
Antiferromagnetic materials have low
geometrical frustration, and a negative coupling between adjacent moments.
Antiferromagnetic materials are relatively uncommon. An example is the heavy-fermion superconductor URu
2Si
2. More everyday examples include metals such as
chromium, alloys such as iron manganese (FeMn), and oxides such as nickel oxide (NiO). There are also numerous examples among high nuclearity metal clusters. Organic molecules can also exhibit antiferromagnetic coupling under rare circumstances, as seen in radicals such as
5-dehydro-m-xylylene.
Antiferromagnets can also couple to
ferromagnetic materials through a mechanism known as
exchange anisotropy, in which the
ferromagnetic film is either grown upon the antiferromagnet or annealed in an aligning magnetic field, causing the surface atoms of the
ferromagnet to align with the surface atoms of the antiferromagnet. This provides the ability to "pin" the orientation of a
ferromagnetic film, which provides one of the main uses in so-called
spin valves, which are the basis of magnetic sensors including modern
hard drive read heads.
There are also examples of disordered materials (such as iron phosphate glasses) that become antiferromagnetic below their Néel temperature. These disordered networks 'frustrate' the antiparallelism of adjacent spins, i.e. it is not possible to construct a network where each spin is surrounded by opposite neighbour spins. It can only be determined that the average correlation of neighbour spins is antiferromagnetic. This type of magnetism is termed 'speromagnetism'.
See also
★
Exchange bias
★
Geometrically frustrated magnet