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Magnetic hyperfine interactions

The third prominent interaction in iron Mossbauer spectroscopy is the magnetic hyperfine interaction of the Fe nucleus with a local magnetic field. As explained in detail in Chap. 4, it can be probed by performing the Mossbauer experiment in the presence of an applied external magnetic field. [Pg.178]

The theory of the hyperfine interaction is, in some respects, similar to that of the quadrupole interaction but is more involved. [Pg.178]

It is well-known that the hyperfine interaction for a given nucleus A consists of three contributions (a) the isotropic Fermi contact term, (b) the spin-dipolar interaction, and (c) the spin-orbit correction. One finds for the three parts of the magnetic hyperfine coupling (HFC), the following expressions [3, 9]  [Pg.178]

A detailed study of the magnetic hyperfine structure in Mossbauer spectra and the performance of DFT methods is available [25]. It is known that DFT typically [Pg.178]

A comparison of anisotropic Fe HFCs with the experimental results shows good agreement between theory and experiment for the ferryl complexes and reasonable agreement for ferrous and ferric complexes. Inspection reveals that the ZORA corrections are mostly small ( 0.1 MHz) but can approach 2 MHz and improve the agreement with the experiment. The SOC contributions are distinctly larger than the scalar-relativistic corrections for the majority of the investigated iron complexes. They can easily exceed 20%. [Pg.180]


The value of the magnetic hyperfine interaction constant C = 22.00 kHz is supposed to be reliably measured in the molecular beam method [71]. Experimental data for 15N2 are shown in Fig. 1.24, which depicts the density-dependence of T2 = (27tAv1/2)-1 at several temperatures. The fact that the dependences T2(p) are linear until 200 amagat proves that binary estimation of the rotational relaxation rate is valid within these limits and that Eq. (1.124) may be used to estimate cross-section oj from... [Pg.57]

Pure nuclear magnetic hyperfine interaction without electric quadrupole interaction is rarely encountered in chemical applications of the Mossbauer effect. Metallic iron is an exception. Quite frequently, a nuclear state is perturbed simultaneously by... [Pg.103]

Fig. 4.13 Combined magnetic hyperfine interaction for Fe with strong electric quadrupole interaction. Top left, electric quadrupole splitting of the ground (g) and excited state (e). Top right first-order perturbation by magnetic dipole interaction arising from a weak field along the main component > 0 of the EFG fq = 0). Bottom the resultant Mossbauer spectrum is shown for a single-crystal type measurement with B fixed perpendicular to the y-rays and B oriented along... Fig. 4.13 Combined magnetic hyperfine interaction for Fe with strong electric quadrupole interaction. Top left, electric quadrupole splitting of the ground (g) and excited state (e). Top right first-order perturbation by magnetic dipole interaction arising from a weak field along the main component > 0 of the EFG fq = 0). Bottom the resultant Mossbauer spectrum is shown for a single-crystal type measurement with B fixed perpendicular to the y-rays and B oriented along...
The underlying physics and analysis of Mossbauer spectra have been explained in detail in Chap. 4. In that chapter, the principles of how a spectrum is parameterized in terms of spin-Hamiltonian (SH) parameters and the physical origin of these SH parameters have been clarified. Many Mossbauer studies, mainly for Fe, have been performed and there is a large body of experimental data concerning electric-and magnetic-hyperfine interactions that is accessible through the Mossbauer Effect Database. [Pg.137]

Fig. 7.83 Mossbauer transmission spectra of Au/Fe multilayer systems with varying Au-layer thickness, measured at 16 K and fitted by a four-component model, including magnetic hyperfine interaction at the Au layer atoms (from [437])... Fig. 7.83 Mossbauer transmission spectra of Au/Fe multilayer systems with varying Au-layer thickness, measured at 16 K and fitted by a four-component model, including magnetic hyperfine interaction at the Au layer atoms (from [437])...
The Hamiltonian which describes the magnetic hyperfine interaction between a nucleus and its associated electrons in an atom can be written (26) as... [Pg.35]


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