10:30 AM–12:06 PM, Friday, October 17, 2008
Union East, 3rd Floor - Ray
Chair: C.A. Quarles, Texas Christian University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.TS4CF.B2.1
10:30 AM–10:54 AM
Alex de Lozanne
(University of Texas at Austin)
Manganites are perovskite structures that were rediscovered in 1994 with the report of a thousand-fold change in resistance upon the application of a magnetic field. This ``colossal magnetoresistance'' is due to a transition between a paramagnetic insulator phase and a ferromagnetic metallic phase. The complex phase diagram of these pseudocubic compounds results in a plethora of interesting phenomena that have been studied intensively for the last 14 years. A newer class of manganites has a bilayer structure that exhibits more complicated ferromagnetic ground states as a function of the hole doping x, because of the two dimensionality of the system. For example, in single crystals of La$_{2-2x}$Sr$_{1+2x}$Mn$_{2}$O$_{7}$ the spins can arrange themselves ferromagnetically or antiferromagnetically, and with easy axes parallel of perpendicular to the bilayer, as the doping x ranges from 0.30 to 0.50. For x=0.32 this transition occurs as a function of temperature as we have observed directly with magnetic force microscopy. We have also observed a charge density wave in this compound using scanning tunneling microscopy.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.TS4CF.B2.1