Ferromagnetic Ordering in CeIr2B2: Transport, magnetization, specific heat and NMR studies
A. Prasad, V. K. Anand, U. B. Paramanik, Z. Hossain, R. Sarkar, N., Oeschler, M. Baenitz, and C. Geibel

TL;DR
This study thoroughly characterizes the ferromagnetic properties of CeIr2B2 using various experimental techniques, revealing details about its magnetic ordering, electronic structure, and low-temperature behavior, including NMR evidence of ferromagnetic correlations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive experimental analysis of CeIr2B2's ferromagnetism, including NMR microscopic insights and a comparison of specific heat data with previous reports, highlighting the effects of 4f correlations.
Findings
CeIr2B2 exhibits bulk ferromagnetic ordering at Tc = 5.1 K.
The Sommerfeld coefficient gamma is 73(4) mJ/molK2, indicating moderate electronic correlations.
Large negative magnetoresistance observed near 5 K, with evidence of gapped-magnon behavior.
Abstract
We present a complete characterization of ferromagnetic system CeIr2B2 using powder x-ray diffraction XRD, magnetic susceptibility chi(T), isothermal magnetization M(H), specific heat C(T), electrical resistivity rho(T,H), and thermoelectric power S(T) measurements. Furthermore 11B NMR study was performed to probe the magnetism on a microscopic scale. The chi(T), C(T) and rho(T) data confirm bulk ferromagnetic ordering with Tc = 5.1 K. Ce ions in CeIr2B2 are in stable trivalent state. Our low-temperature C(T) data measured down to 0.4 K yield Sommerfeld coefficient gamma = 73(4) mJ/molK2 which is much smaller than the previously reported value of gamma = 180 mJ/molK2 deduced from the specific heat measurement down to 2.5 K. For LaIr2B2 gamma = 6(1) mJ/molK2 which implies the density of states at the Fermi level D(EF) = 2.54 states/(eV f.u.) for both spin directions. The renormalization…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
