Acoustic-mode vibrational anharmonicity related to the anomalous thermal expansion of Invar iron alloys

Ll. Maosa, G. A. Saunders, H. Rahdi, U. Kawald, J. Pelzl, and H. Bach
Phys. Rev. B 45, 2224 – Published 1 February 1992
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Abstract

Measurements of the temperature dependences of the hydrostatic-pressure derivatives of the velocities of ultrasonic waves propagated in single crystals of the Invars Fe72Pt28 and Fe72Pt25Ni3 verify that the negative thermal expansion in the ferromagnetic phase of these alloys is directly associated with longitudinal-acoustic-mode softening. In the paramagnetic phase of Fe72Pt28, the hydrostatic-pressure derivatives of each of the elastic-tensor components and the bulk modulus B are positive, showing normal behavior in the sense that the long-wavelength acoustic-phonon frequencies increase under pressure. However, below the Curie temperature TC the velocities of longitudinal untrasonic waves propagated along the [100] and [110] directions in Fe72Pt28 and Fe72Pt25Ni3 decrease strongly with pressure; thus (∂C11/∂P)P=0, (∂CL/∂P)P=0, and (∂BS/∂P)P=0 are negative due to the magnetoelastic interaction. These Invar alloys show the extraordinary property of becoming easier to compress as the pressure is increased. The negative signs of (∂C11/∂P)P=0 and (∂CL/∂P)P=0 give rise to negative values for all the longitudinal- and quasilongitudinal-acoustic-mode Grüneisen parameters in the ferromagnetic phase.

This experimental observation is in accord with a recent prediction of negative longitudinal-acoustic-mode Grüneisen parameters stemming from itinerant-electron-magnetism theory. For Fe72Pt28 the hydrostatic-pressure derivative (∂C11/∂P)P=0 is negative, attains its maximum value just above room temperature, and becomes much smaller as the temperature is lowered, matching, and accounting for, the behavior of the thermal expansion, which is negative in the temperature range between about 260 K and the Curie temperature. In the case of the archetypal Invar alloy Fe65Ni35, the hydrostatic-pressure derivatives of the elastic-stiffness-tensor components are positive, but (∂C11/∂P)P=0 and (∂CL/∂P)P=0 are small in the ferromagnetic phase, consistent with its small but positive thermal expansion. It is concluded that longitudinal-acoustic-mode softening due to the magnetoelastic interaction is the source of the Invar behavior of each of these iron alloys. In addition, measurements of the temperature dependences of the ultrasonic wave velocities establish that the fcc-bct martensitic phase transition in Fe-Ni and Fe-Pt alloys is driven by a soft shear zone-center acoustic phonon with propagation vector 〈110〉 and polarization vector 〈11¯0〉.

  • Received 24 September 1991

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.45.2224

©1992 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Ll. Maosa, G. A. Saunders, and H. Rahdi

  • School of Physics, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, United Kingdom

U. Kawald, J. Pelzl, and H. Bach

  • Institut für Experimentalphysik, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, Germany

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Issue

Vol. 45, Iss. 5 — 1 February 1992

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