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Stimuli responsive polymersomes: Small Angle Neutron Scattering studies
May 27 14:30 - 15:30
- Diblock copolymers can self-assemble in solution in stable and robust polymersomes (vesicles),...
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To deuterate or not to deuterate? That is the question
June 03 14:30 - 15:30
- Accepted wisdom when performing diffraction experiments with neutrons is to deuterate the...
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Static and dynamic properties of a strong-leg spin-ladder
June 17 14:30 - 15:30
- The AF S = 1/2 Heisenberg spin ladder belongs to the simplest quantum magnets, yet disclosing the...
Microscopic evidence of skyrmion lattice using neutrons
Using small angle neutron scattering at the instrument MIRA at the FRM II and V4 at the Helmholtz Centre Berlin, Tim Adams of the TU München physics department has delivered the missing microscopic evidence for the topological characteristics of a long reaching skyrmion lattice.
The discovery of the skyrmion lattices has evoqued a large interest since 2009. An open question was the direct microscopic evidence of the special topological properties of a skyrmion lattice in samples.
Using small angle scattering at MIRA at FRM II and V4 at HZB, Tim Adams and the same team from Munich and Cologne have succeeded in finding the evidence. They report in Physical Review Letters about their discovery. Using a neutron scattering trick, the so-called Renninger scan, they managed to highly suppress parasitic scattering signals.
Original Publication:
Long-Range Crystalline Nature of the Skyrmion Lattice in MnSi Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 217206 (2011)
T. Adams, S. Mühlbauer, C. Pfleiderer, F. Jonietz, A. Bauer, A. Neubauer, R. Georgii, P. Böni, U. Keiderling, K. Everschor, M. Garst, and A. Rosch
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.217206


