<P>Volume 32 of Group III is a supplement to volume III/19 and deals with the magnetic properties of metals, alloys and metallic compounds which contain at least one transition element.</P> <P>The present subvolume III/32D deals with the magnetic properties of rare earth elements (section 2.1), as w
Magnetic Properties of Metals: d-Elements, Alloys and Compounds
β Scribed by H. P. J. Wijn (auth.), H. P. J. Wijn (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 201
- Series
- Data in Science and Technology
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
During the last decades the knowledge of the magnetic properties of the d transition elements and of their metallic alloys and compounds has increased widely. The improvement of preparation techniques for well-defined substances, the development of sophisticated measuring methods and above all the drive to obtain more insight in the origin of magnetic interactions in solids have resulted in the publication of many specific magnetic properties for an abundance of all kinds of metallic materials. The data assembled in this booklet are selected from the comprehensive compilation of magnetic and related properties of metals in the Landolt-Bornstein New Series Group III subΒ volumes 19a, band c. It has been attempted to include preferentially those properties which are of a basic character and which therefore are most often needed by scientists active in the field of solid state magnetism. In the field of magnetism, there is a gradual transition from the use of cgs/emu units to SI units. It was, however, not intended to represent all data in the units of one system, regardless of how nice this would have been from a systematic point of view. Instead, mostly preference was given to the system of units that was originally used by the authors whose work is quoted. Thus cgs/ emu units occur most frequently. Of colirse the user of the tables and figures is helped in several ways to convert the data to the units which he is most familiar with, see, e. g.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XII
3d elements....Pages 1-21
Alloys between 3d elements....Pages 22-62
4d and 5d elements....Pages 63-67
Alloys and compounds of 3d elements and 4d or 5d elements....Pages 68-94
Alloys and compounds of 3d elements with main group elements....Pages 95-158
Alloys and compounds between 4d or 5d elements and main group elements....Pages 159-167
Heusler alloys....Pages 168-173
Metallic perovskites....Pages 174-180
Back Matter....Pages 181-190
β¦ Subjects
Metallic Materials;Optics and Electrodynamics;Science, general;Physics, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>The subject of this Landolt-BΓΆrnstein volume is to present data on the magnetic properties of materials under pressure. Data for magnetic single metals, disordered and ordered alloys and compounds containing 3d elements as magnetic atoms are presented. This comprehensive set of data shows crys
Springer-Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg New York, 1997, 439 p. ISBN 3-540-60334-4<div class="bb-sep"></div>The intrinsic magnetic properties of metals, alloys and metallic<br/>compounds have been systematically compiled in the various subvolumes<br/>19AβF of the Landolt-BΓΆrnstein New Series Group III. Ea