Monovacancy paramagnetism in neutron-irradiated graphite probed by $^{13}$C NMR
arXiv:1707.03748 · doi:10.1088/1361-648X/aa8d47
Abstract
We report on the magnetic properties of monovacancy defects in neutron-irradiated graphite, probed by $^{13}$C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The bulk paramagnetism of the defect moments is revealed by the temperature dependence of the NMR frequency shift and spectral linewidth, both of which follow a Curie behavior, in agreement with measurements of the macroscopic magnetization. Compared to pristine graphite, the fluctuating hyperfine fields generated by the defect moments lead to an enhancement of the $^{13}$C nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate $1/T_{1}$ by about two orders of magnitude. With an applied magnetic field of 7.1 T, the temperature dependence of $1/T_{1}$ below about 10 K can well be described by a thermally activated form, $1/T_{1}\propto\exp(-Î/k_{B}T)$, yielding a singular Zeeman energy of ($0.41\pm0.01$) meV, in excellent agreement with the sole presence of polarized, non-interacting defect moments.
6 pages, 3 figures