Abstract

Rare earth metals (REM) occupy a special and important place in our lives. This became especially noticeable during the rapid development of industry in the industrial era of the twentieth century. The tendency of development of the rare-earth metals market certainly remains in the XXI century. According to experts estimates the industry demand for chemical compounds based on them will tend to grow during the nearest years until it reaches the market balance. At the same time, the practical use of high-purity rare-earth metals requires the most accurate understanding of the physical properties of metals, especially magnetic ones. Despite a certain decline in interest in the study of high-purity REM single crystals during the last decade, a number of scientific groups (Ames Lab, Lomonosov Moscow State University (MSU), Baikov Institute of Metallurgy and Materials Science Russian Academy of Science (RAS)) are still conducting high-purity studies on high-purity metal samples. The present article is a combination of a review work covering the analysis of the main works devoted to the study of heavy REMs from gadolinium to thulium, as well as original results obtained at MSU. The paper considers the electronic properties of metals in terms of calculating the density of states, analyzes the regularities of the magnetic phase diagrams of metals, gives the original dependences of the Neel temperature and tricritical temperatures for Gd, Tb, Dy, Er, Ho, Tm, and also introduces a phenomenological parameter that would serve as an indicator of the phase transformation in heavy REMs.

Highlights

  • The family of lanthanides includes 13 or 15 elements, from cerium to ytterbium or from lanthanum to lutetium

  • In the Periodic Table of elements, they are placed between barium and hafnium, so Rare earth metals (REM) usually have a separate row at the bottom of the table

  • It is important to note that the melting temperatures of the metals monotonically increase from gadolinium to erbium with a slight decrease for thulium compared to erbium

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Summary

Introduction

The family of lanthanides (rare earth metals) includes 13 or 15 elements, from cerium to ytterbium or from lanthanum to lutetium. The numerical results obtained so far, as well as the absence of a rigorous theory of rare-earth magnetism, allow only to say that the properties of the Fermi surface play a fundamental role in establishing periodic magnetic structures in heavy REMs. The magnetic structure is significantly transformed when the temperature decreases due to changes in the energy spectrum of conduction electrons and due to the influence of magnetocrystalline and magnetoelastic interactions [26].

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