Abstract

Direct comparison of the properties of a thin surface layer and the bulk of macroscopic hematite (α-Fe2O3) crystals was used to study the magnetic structure of the surface layer and the bulk and the processes attendant on spin-reorientation phase transition (SRT). The investigation tool was simultaneous γ-ray, X-ray, and electronic Mossbauer spectroscopy, which enabled us to study the bulk and surface properties of macroscopic samples simultaneously and to compare them directly. Direct evidence of the existence of a surface “transition layer” on hematite crystals is obtained. The existence of this layer was suggested and described by Krinchik and Zubov [JETP 69, 707 (1975)]. The study in the SRT region showed that (1) the Morin SRT in the crystal bulk occurs in a jump (as a first-order phase transition), whereas in the surface layer of about 200 nm thick, some smoothness appears in the mechanism of magnetic-moment reorientation; (2) SRT in the surface layer, as in the bulk, involves an intermediate state in which low-and high-temperature phases coexist; and (3) SRT in the surface layer occurs at a temperature several degrees higher than in the bulk. Our experimental evidence on the SRT mechanism in the surface layer correlates with the inferences from phenomenological theory developed by Kaganov [JETP 79, 1544 (1980)].

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