David B. Mitzi
Journal of Materials Chemistry
Measurements of the electron-spin-resonance (ESR) linewidth ΔH in NaCrS2 are presented and compared with the theory of Richards and Salamon for ESR in two dimensions (2d). NaCrS2 was chosen because it is a layer compound with a ferromagnetic intraplane interaction J and a sizable antiferromagnetic interplane interaction J′ (|J′J|=16). Previously the most detailed study of ESR which paid specific attention to the 2d feature of the spin dynamics was for K2MnF4, which has negligible J′ and an antiferromagnetic J; so it is of interest to compare the two systems. ΔH in NaCrS2 does not have a minimum at 3cos2θ=1 (θ=angle of field with respect to c axis), in contrast to the situation in K2MnF4. This feature is explained by the effect of interplane coupling. The theory, modified to account for interplane exchange, also correctly gives the high-temperature ratio ΔH(θ=0)ΔH(θ=90°)=1.6. The measured peak-to-peak linewidth at θ=0 and room temperature, ΔH=80 Oe, is smaller than the calculated 125 Oe. ΔH increases continuously as the temperature T is lowered in a manner described reasonably well by theory. Here agreement is much better than in some other planar ferromagnets which possibly have more nondipolar broadening mechanisms than NaCrS2. The anisotropy ΔH(θ=0)ΔH(θ=90°) decreases as the temperature is lowered, which is in contradiction to theory for a fixed J′J and to results on other quasi-2d compounds and may be indicative of J′J being temperature dependent. © 1974 The American Physical Society.
David B. Mitzi
Journal of Materials Chemistry
Frank R. Libsch, Takatoshi Tsujimura
Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays Technology and Applications 1997
Mitsuru Ueda, Hideharu Mori, et al.
Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry
I. Morgenstern, K.A. Müller, et al.
Physica B: Physics of Condensed Matter