Paradoxes of the influence of small Ni impurity additions in a NaCl crystal on the kinetics of its magnetoplasticity
- Authors: Alshits V.I.1, Darinskaya E.V.1, Koldaeva M.V.1, Petrzhik E.A.1
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Affiliations:
- Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
- Issue: Vol 122, No 1 (2016)
- Pages: 118-130
- Section: Solids and Liquids
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7761/article/view/189636
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063776115130014
- ID: 189636
Cite item
Abstract
A comparative study of magnetoplasticity in two types of NaCl crystals differing in impurity content only by a small Ni addition (0.06 ppm) in one of them, NaCl(Ni), has been carried out. Two methods of sample magnetic exposure were used: in a constant field B = 0–0.6 T and in crossed fields in the EPR scheme—the Earth’s field BEarth (50 μT) and a variable pumping field \(\tilde B( \sim 1 \mu T)\) at frequencies ν ~ 1 MHz. In the experiments in the EPR scheme, the change of the field orientation from \(\tilde B \bot B_{Earth}\) to \(\left. {\tilde B} \right\|B_{Earth}\) led to almost complete suppression of the effect in the NaCl(Ni) crystals and reduced only slightly (approximately by 20%) the height of the resonance peak of dislocation mean paths in the crystals without Ni, with the amplitude of the mean paths in NaCl(Ni) in the orientation \(\tilde B \bot B_{Earth}\) having been appreciably lower than that in NaCl. In contrast, upon exposure to a constant magnetic field, a more intense effect was observed in the crystal with Ni. The threshold pumping field amplitude \(\tilde B\), below which the effect is absent under resonance conditions, for the NaCl(Ni) crystals turned out to be a factor of 5 smaller than that for NaCl, while the thresholds of a constant magnetic field coincide for both types of crystals. All these differences are discussed in detail and interpreted.
About the authors
V. I. Alshits
Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
Author for correspondence.
Email: alshits@ns.crys.ras.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 59, Moscow, 119333
E. V. Darinskaya
Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
Email: alshits@ns.crys.ras.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 59, Moscow, 119333
M. V. Koldaeva
Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
Email: alshits@ns.crys.ras.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 59, Moscow, 119333
E. A. Petrzhik
Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
Email: alshits@ns.crys.ras.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 59, Moscow, 119333
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