Entropy engineering and tunable magnetic order in the spinel high entropy oxide
Graham H.J. Johnstone, Mario U. Gonz\'alez-Rivas, Keith M. Taddei,, Ronny Sutarto, George A. Sawatzky, Robert J. Green, Mohamed Oudah, and, Alannah M. Hallas

TL;DR
This study investigates how magnetic properties of spinel high entropy oxides can be tuned through compositional changes, revealing the interplay between entropy, site selectivity, and magnetism, with implications for entropy engineering in materials design.
Contribution
It demonstrates the magnetic tunability and entropy variation in spinel high entropy oxides via Ga substitution, highlighting site selectivity effects and entropy engineering potential.
Findings
Ferrimagnetic order remains robust across compositions.
Ga substitution significantly alters magnetic moments and ordering temperature.
Configurational entropy can be increased through targeted compositional changes.
Abstract
Spinel oxides are an ideal setting to explore the interplay between configurational entropy, site selectivity, and magnetism in high entropy oxides. In this work we characterize the magnetic properties of the spinel (Cr,Mn,Fe,Co,Ni)O and study the evolution of its magnetism as a function of non-magnetic gallium substitution. Across the range of compositions studied here, from 0% to 40% Ga, magnetic susceptibility and powder neutron diffraction measurements show that ferrimagnetic order is robust in the spinel HEO. However, we also find that the ferrimagnetic order is highly tunable, with the ordering temperature, saturated and sublattice moments, and magnetic hardness all varying significantly as a function of Ga concentration. Through x-ray absorption and magnetic circular dichroism, we are able to correlate this magnetic tunability with strong site selectivity between the…
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