Magnetization steps in a diluted Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chain: Theory and experiments on TMMC:Cd
A. Paduan-Filho, N. F. Oliveira, Jr., V. Bindilatti, S. Foner, and Y., Shapira

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical model for the low-temperature magnetization of diluted Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chains, compares it with experimental data on TMMC:Cd, and explores non-equilibrium effects in high magnetic fields.
Contribution
It introduces a combined equilibrium and non-equilibrium theoretical framework and applies it to experimental magnetization data on TMMC:Cd with varying cadmium concentrations.
Findings
Magnetization curves match theoretical predictions at low fields.
Non-equilibrium effects increase with dilution.
Exchange constant J varies with cadmium concentration.
Abstract
A theory for the equilibrium low-temperature magnetization M of a diluted Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chain is presented. The magnetization curve, M versus B, is calculated using the exact contributions of finite chains with 1 to 5 spins, and the "rise and ramp approximation" for longer chains. Some non-equilibrium effects that occur in a rapidly changing B, are also considered. Specific non-equilibrium models based on earlier treatments of the phonon bottleneck, and of spin flips associated with cross relaxation and with level crossings, are discussed. Magnetization data on powders of TMMC diluted with cadmium [i.e., (CH_3)_4NMn_xCd_(1-x)Cl_3, with 0.16<=x<=0.50 were measured at 0.55 K in 18 T superconducting magnets. The field B_1 at the first MST from pairs is used to determine the NN exchange constant, J, which changes from -5.9 K to -6.5 K as x increases from 0.16 to 0.50. The…
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