Seminars Archive
From Charge to Orbitals: Ordering Phenomena Studied by Resonant (Soft/Hard) X-Ray Scattering
Abstract
Wednesday, June 15, 2005, 14:00
Seminar Room
Sincrotrone Trieste, Basovizza
From Charge to Orbitals: Ordering Phenomena Studied
by Resonant (Soft/Hard) X-Ray Scattering
Urs Staub
(SLS, Villigen - Switzerland)
Abstract
It is shown how charge (monopoles), magnetic (dipoles) and orbitals
(quadrupoles and higher multipoles) can be accessed by resonant X-ray scattering.
Examples are given by the perovskite RNiO3, where hard and soft X-ray resonant
X-ray scattering is used to study the charge and magnetic ordering of the
Ni ions. The consistent interpretation of these signals and the absence
of a detectable orbital contribution indicates that the unusual magnetic
structure is not based on a particular scheme of orbital ordering. It is
shown how these ordering phenomena relate to the metal-to-insulator transition.
The second example concerns the layered manganite La0.5Sr1.5MnO4, where
a detailed soft X-ray scattering study deduces the magnetic and orbital
ordering. It is shown that polarization analysis and azimuthal scans are
required to understand the observed signals. Moreover, the different temperature
dependence of different features in the spectra points either to a strong
interference of a magnetic signal originated by short range correlations
with the orbital signal, or to a different order parameter of the Jahn-Teller
distortion and the orbital ordering itself.
In a last example, if time allows, higher-multipole ordering is discussed
the 4f electron material DyB2C2. The energy dependence of the resonant
soft X-ray scattering exhibits clear interference effects, which can be
explained by an intra-atomic quadrupole interaction giving rise to a splitting
of the core states. This makes the signal sensitive to quadrupoles (rank
2), hexadecapoles (rank 4) and hexacontatetrapoles (rank 6).