2016
DOI: 10.1103/physrevb.94.014111
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Critical behavior of the order-disorder phase transition inβ-brass investigated by x-ray scattering

Abstract: β-brass exhibits an archetypical example of an order-disorder transition with a critical behavior that was previously investigated by neutron scattering. The data were well described by the three-dimensional (3d) Ising model but the relatively crude experimental resolution prevented an in-depth examination of the single-length scaling hypothesis, a cornerstone in the theory of critical phenomena. With the development of synchrotron x-ray experiments, high-resolution data could be recorded and surprisingly it w… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…As is known, the Ising model on a bipartite lattice in zero external field ordered antiferromagnetically can be mapped onto ferromagnetic model by flipping the spins on every second site and simultaneously changing signs of the 2, respectively; the upper horizontal dashed-dotted line is the best known universal value for the exponent [8], the lower line is the value used in [11].…”
Section: Ordering In Beta Brassmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As is known, the Ising model on a bipartite lattice in zero external field ordered antiferromagnetically can be mapped onto ferromagnetic model by flipping the spins on every second site and simultaneously changing signs of the 2, respectively; the upper horizontal dashed-dotted line is the best known universal value for the exponent [8], the lower line is the value used in [11].…”
Section: Ordering In Beta Brassmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Current non-perturbative RG approaches [9,6,10,8] suffer from poorly controlled approximations and so are not reliable enough to quantitatively predict non-universal quantities. Presumably because of this, phenomenological theories and the high-temperature expansions of simple model systems developed before the advent of the RG theory are still being invoked to interpret experimental data on the second-order phase transitions (see [11] and references therein).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) deliver ultra-short fs pulses of x-ray photons at fluences that exceed those of synchrotron radiation sources by many orders of magnitude. 1 These key characteristics (pulse durations of a few femtoseconds, of the order 10 12 photons per pulse, focussed to spot sizes of a few 100 nm in diameter) open scientific opportunities in many research fields, 2 including ultra-fast dynamics in atoms, molecules, and clusters, [3][4][5] condensed matter spectroscopy, 6,7 high energy density science, 8 materials research 9 , and structural biology. 10 In the latter case, the "probe-before-destruction" technique, i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This order-disorder phase transition has attracted much fundamental interest since it is regarded as a model system for second order phase transitions and critical behavior, e.g., the Heisenberg antiferromagnet and the Ising model, see Ref. [8] and references therein. Highresolution x-ray scattering has been instrumental in characterizing metallic alloys and determining their phase diagrams.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%