Spontaneous magnetization
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Spontaneous magnetization is the appearance of an ordered spin state (magnetization) at zero applied magnetic field in a ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic material below a critical point called the Curie temperature or TCScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"..
Overview
Heated to temperatures above TCScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., ferromagnetic materials become paramagnetic and their magnetic behavior is dominated by spin waves or magnons, which are boson collective excitations with energies in the meV range. The magnetization that occurs below TCScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". is an example of the "spontaneous" breaking of a global symmetry, a phenomenon that is described by Goldstone's theorem. The term "symmetry breaking" refers to the choice of a magnetization direction by the spins, which have spherical symmetry above TCScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., but a preferred axis (the magnetization direction) below TCScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"..Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Temperature dependence
To a first order approximation, the temperature dependence of spontaneous magnetization at low temperatures is given by the Bloch T3/2Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". law (by Felix Bloch):[1]Template:Rp
where M(0)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". is the spontaneous magnetization at absolute zero. The decrease in spontaneous magnetization at higher temperatures is caused by the increasing excitation of spin waves. In a particle description, the spin waves correspond to magnons, which are the massless Goldstone bosons corresponding to the broken symmetry. This is exactly true for an isotropic magnet.
Magnetic anisotropy, that is the existence of an easy direction along which the moments align spontaneously in the crystal, corresponds however to "massive" magnons. This is a way of saying that they cost a minimum amount of energy to excite, hence they are very unlikely to be excited as . Hence the magnetization of an anisotropic magnet is harder to destroy at low temperature and the temperature dependence of the magnetization deviates accordingly from the Bloch T3/2 law. All real magnets are anisotropic to some extent.
Near the Curie temperature,
where βScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". is a critical exponent that depends on the universality class of the magnetic interaction. Experimentally the exponent is 0.34 for iron and 0.51 for nickel.[2]
An empirical interpolation of the two regimes is given by
it is easy to check two limits of this interpolation that follow laws similar to the Bloch law, for , and the critical behavior, for , respectively.
See also
Notes and references
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