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Hauptverfasser: Li, Yuntian, Hu, Jiayi, Petruzzi, Dominic, Ye, Linda, Zic, Mark P., Shekhter, Arkady, Fisher, Ian R.
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12731
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author Li, Yuntian
Hu, Jiayi
Petruzzi, Dominic
Ye, Linda
Zic, Mark P.
Shekhter, Arkady
Fisher, Ian R.
author_facet Li, Yuntian
Hu, Jiayi
Petruzzi, Dominic
Ye, Linda
Zic, Mark P.
Shekhter, Arkady
Fisher, Ian R.
contents Alternating (AC) magnetic fields can induce not only an alternating magnetization in materials, but also an alternating temperature via the magnetocaloric effect. The latter effect is typically neglected when performing AC susceptibility measurements, but consideration of both effects on an equal footing is necessary in order to reliably distinguish between internal and external causes of magnetic response and accurately extract quantitative information about relaxation processes. In order to address this, we have developed a method to measure the AC magnetocaloric effect that is compatible with AC susceptibility measurements, and also a framework to analyze these data in combination. We demonstrate the efficacy of this approach using YbVO4, a material for which strong single-ion anisotropy leads to slow spin-lattice relaxation at low temperatures via a phonon bottleneck effect. We report AC magnetic susceptibility and AC magnetocaloric effect measurements for this material as a function of field and frequency at a temperature of 3 K. We analyze the data using a discretized thermal model, and extract the field-dependence of the intrinsic spin-lattice relaxation rate. This demonstration experiment illustrates a general approach to quantitatively address multiple measured quantities in driven systems using a unified thermal circuit analysis. The thermal analysis methods presented in this report can be extended to study other magnetic, dielectric, and elastic materials exhibiting a complex response to an external driving field in the presence of internal and external relaxation, particularly when an energy dissipation process is within an accessible frequency regime.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_12731
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Slow spin-lattice relaxation dynamics in YbVO4 revealed by extended thermal impedance spectroscopy from AC susceptibility and AC magnetocaloric measurements
Li, Yuntian
Hu, Jiayi
Petruzzi, Dominic
Ye, Linda
Zic, Mark P.
Shekhter, Arkady
Fisher, Ian R.
Materials Science
Other Condensed Matter
Applied Physics
Alternating (AC) magnetic fields can induce not only an alternating magnetization in materials, but also an alternating temperature via the magnetocaloric effect. The latter effect is typically neglected when performing AC susceptibility measurements, but consideration of both effects on an equal footing is necessary in order to reliably distinguish between internal and external causes of magnetic response and accurately extract quantitative information about relaxation processes. In order to address this, we have developed a method to measure the AC magnetocaloric effect that is compatible with AC susceptibility measurements, and also a framework to analyze these data in combination. We demonstrate the efficacy of this approach using YbVO4, a material for which strong single-ion anisotropy leads to slow spin-lattice relaxation at low temperatures via a phonon bottleneck effect. We report AC magnetic susceptibility and AC magnetocaloric effect measurements for this material as a function of field and frequency at a temperature of 3 K. We analyze the data using a discretized thermal model, and extract the field-dependence of the intrinsic spin-lattice relaxation rate. This demonstration experiment illustrates a general approach to quantitatively address multiple measured quantities in driven systems using a unified thermal circuit analysis. The thermal analysis methods presented in this report can be extended to study other magnetic, dielectric, and elastic materials exhibiting a complex response to an external driving field in the presence of internal and external relaxation, particularly when an energy dissipation process is within an accessible frequency regime.
title Slow spin-lattice relaxation dynamics in YbVO4 revealed by extended thermal impedance spectroscopy from AC susceptibility and AC magnetocaloric measurements
topic Materials Science
Other Condensed Matter
Applied Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12731