Role of local short-scale correlations in the mechanism of negative magnetization
M. Tripathi, T. Chatterji, H.E. Fischer, R. Raghunathan, S. Majumder,, R. J. Choudhary, D.M.Phase

TL;DR
This study investigates how local short-range magnetic correlations and spin frustration in GdCrO3 lead to negative magnetization, despite the material's antiferromagnetic order, revealing complex microscopic mechanisms.
Contribution
It uncovers the role of short-range correlations and spin frustration in causing negative magnetization in GdCrO3, which cannot be explained by long-range magnetic structure alone.
Findings
Negative magnetization occurs over a broad temperature range.
Short-range magnetic correlations extend up to 9 Å.
Spin frustration in the ground state explains the negative magnetization.
Abstract
We elaborate here why the antiferromagnetically ordered GdCrO responds in a diamagnetic way under certain conditions, by monitoring the evolution of the microscopic global and local magnetic phases. Using high energy 0.3 eV neutrons, the magnetic ordering is shown to adopt three distinct magnetic phases at different temperatures: G,A,F below N\'eel temperature = 171 K; (F, C, G)( F,C) below 7 K and an intermediate phase for 7 K 20 K in the vicinity of spin-reorientation phase transition. Although, bulk magnetometry reveals a huge negative magnetization (NM) in the terms of both magnitude and temperature range ( ( 18 K) 35 (161 K), K in presence of = 0.01 T); the long-range magnetic structure and derived ordered…
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