Correlation between magnetism and magnetocaloric effect in RCo2-based Laves phase compounds
Niraj K. Singh, K. G. Suresh, A. K. Nigam, S. K. Malik, A. A. Coelho, and S. Gama

TL;DR
This study explores how magnetovolume effects influence the magnetic transitions and magnetocaloric properties of RCo2-based Laves phase compounds, revealing correlations with itinerant electron metamagnetism and pressure/substitution effects.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of the magnetic and magnetocaloric behavior of RCo2 compounds under various conditions, linking magnetovolume effects with IEM and MCE.
Findings
Magnetovolume effect determines the nature of magnetic transitions.
Substitutions and pressure alter the ordering temperature via magnetovolume effects.
Strong correlation between Landau coefficient and magnetocaloric effect.
Abstract
By virtue of the itinerant electron metamagnetism (IEM), the RCo2 compounds with R=Er, Ho and Dy are found to show first order magnetic transition at their ordering temperatures. The inherent instability of Co sublattice magnetism is responsible for the occurrence of IEM, which leads to interesting magnetic and related properties. The systematic studies of the variations in the magnetic and magnetocaloric properties of the RCo2-based compounds show that the magnetovolume effect plays a decisive role in determining the nature of magnetic transitions and hence the magnetocaloric effect (MCE) in these compound. It is found that the spin fluctuations arising due to the magnetovolume effect reduce the strength of IEM in these compounds, which subsequently lead to a reduction in the MCE. Most of the substitutions at the Co site are found to result in a positive magnetovolume effect, leading…
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.
