Ferromagnetism or slow paramagnetic relaxation in Fe-doped Li$_3$N?
M. Fix, A. Jesche, S. G. Jantz, S. A. Br\"auninger, H.-H. Klauss, R., S. Manna, I. M. Pietsch, H. A. H\"oppe, and P. C. Canfield

TL;DR
This study investigates the magnetic properties of Fe-doped Li$_3$N, revealing ferromagnetic behavior with slow relaxation and quantum tunneling effects at low temperatures, supported by various spectroscopic and thermodynamic measurements.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of Fe-doped Li$_3$N's magnetic behavior, highlighting ferromagnetism, slow relaxation, and quantum tunneling phenomena not previously characterized in detail.
Findings
Magnetic hysteresis appears below 50 K with high coercivity.
Relaxation times suggest quantum tunneling at low temperatures.
Magnetic entropy exceeds expectations for a simple doublet ground state.
Abstract
We report on isothermal magnetization, M\"ossbauer spectroscopy, and magnetostriction as well as temperature-dependent alternating-current (ac) susceptibility, specific heat, and thermal expansion of single crystalline and polycrstalline Li(LiFe)N with and . Magnetic hysteresis emerges at temperatures below K with coercivity fields of up to T at K and magnetic anisotropy energies of K (meV). The ac susceptibility is strongly frequency dependent (--Hz) and reveals an effective energy barrier for spin reversal of K. The relaxation times follow Arrhenius behavior for K. For K, however, the relaxation times of s are only weakly temperature-dependent indicating the relevance of a quantum tunneling process…
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