Magnetic entropy vs. magnetic field

In summary: Thank you very much for your reply, M. Quack.In summary, M. Quack found that the magnetic entropy measured at 0.5 Tesla is higher than that measured at 0 T. He is unsure why this is the case, but he is considering measuring the magnetic entropy at high temperatures to determine if it is due to an instrumental problem.
  • #1
fuzhendong
3
0
I measured the heat capacity of a sample under various magnetic fields. When I calculated the magnetic entropy as a function of temperature, I found the magnetic entropy measured at 0.5 Tesla is higher than that measured at 0 T. As far as I know, the magnetic field will try to allign the magnetic moments, causing the magnetic entropy drops. But why the magnetic entropy that I measured increases as the magnetic field increases?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
A very good question.

Usually you get the entropy from integrating the measured specific heat from low temperature. So if there is some phase transition or other funky stuff going on below your lowest measured temperature, you will miss the entropy associated with that. If the 0.5T field kills or shifts that feature to above the lowest measured temperature it looks as if the in-field state has higher entropy.

The usual way to check is to see the entropy at high temperature, safely above all phase transitions and other anomalies. Do you get the same value for all your data sets?

BTW, what is the sample, over what temperature range have you measured, etc?
 
  • #3
Thank you very much for your reply, M. Quack.
This sample is a molecular magnet {V15}. The difficulty of this sample is the specific-heat contribution from lattice is difficult to be subtracted since I got no nonmagnetic reference. Therefore the magnetic specific heat cannot be obtained precisely at high temperatures.
The measurements were performed from 60 mK to 300 K. And the magnetic entropy were obtained from 60 mK to 8 K. Only at low temperatures (<8 K), where the lattice contribution can be assumed to be proportional to T^3, I managed to fit the total specific heat with lattice contribution (~T^3) and magnetic contribution (two Schottky anomalies). Indeed a part of the Schottky anomaly is below 60 mK. Though the data were fitted quite well above 60 mK and the magnetic entroy was calculated using the fitting curve from zero temperature, maybe some of the magnetic contribution is not well reproduced below 60 mK.
Now I am considering to do another measurement with a better-calibrated puck to exclude the instrumental facts. If it's not due to the instrumenal problem, then I guess some of the magnetic specific heat is shifted to higher temperature under higher fields, which makes this problem unsolvable unless a nonmagnetic reference is ready.

M Quack said:
A very good question.

Usually you get the entropy from integrating the measured specific heat from low temperature. So if there is some phase transition or other funky stuff going on below your lowest measured temperature, you will miss the entropy associated with that. If the 0.5T field kills or shifts that feature to above the lowest measured temperature it looks as if the in-field state has higher entropy.

The usual way to check is to see the entropy at high temperature, safely above all phase transitions and other anomalies. Do you get the same value for all your data sets?

BTW, what is the sample, over what temperature range have you measured, etc?
 

What is magnetic entropy?

Magnetic entropy is a measure of disorder or randomness within a magnetic system. It describes the relationship between the magnetic field and the number of possible arrangements of magnetic moments within a material.

What is magnetic field?

Magnetic field is a physical quantity that describes the strength and direction of the magnetic force produced by a magnet or electric current. It is measured in units of tesla (T) or gauss (G).

How does magnetic entropy change with magnetic field?

Magnetic entropy typically increases with an increase in magnetic field. This means that as the strength of the magnetic field increases, the disorder or randomness within the magnetic system also increases.

What is the relationship between magnetic entropy and temperature?

There is a direct relationship between magnetic entropy and temperature. As temperature increases, the disorder within the magnetic system also increases, leading to an increase in magnetic entropy.

What are the practical applications of understanding magnetic entropy vs. magnetic field?

Understanding the relationship between magnetic entropy and magnetic field is important in fields such as material science, physics, and engineering. It can help in the development of new materials with specific magnetic properties, as well as in the design of magnetic devices such as hard drives and motors.

Similar threads

  • General Engineering
Replies
9
Views
851
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
8
Views
831
  • Atomic and Condensed Matter
Replies
1
Views
796
  • Atomic and Condensed Matter
Replies
4
Views
3K
  • Atomic and Condensed Matter
Replies
6
Views
4K
Replies
17
Views
1K
  • Beyond the Standard Models
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
9
Views
1K
Replies
14
Views
2K
Replies
20
Views
1K
Back
Top