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Phys. Rev. B 79, 054301 (2009) [6 pages]

Vibrational properties of rare-earth nitrides: Raman spectra and theory

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S. Granville, C. Meyer, A. R. H. Preston, B. M. Ludbrook, B. J. Ruck, and H. J. Trodahl*
MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology, School of Chemical and Physical Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, P.O. Box 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand

T. R. Paudel and W. R. L. Lambrecht
Department of Physics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-7079, USA

Received 13 November 2008; revised 13 January 2009; published 12 February 2009

Raman spectra are presented for the rare-earth nitrides SmN, GdN, DyN, ErN, and LuN measured with 633 and 514 nm excitation wavelengths and at temperatures above and below the Curie temperature. Frozen-phonon calculations are presented for the phonons at Γ, L, and X points in the same series of materials plus previously studied YbN using the full-potential linearized muffin-tin orbital method and the LSDA+U (local spin-density approximation+Hubbard U corrections). The method is found to be in good agreement with recent linear-response pseudopotential calculations for the closely related ScN. Comparison with ScN and Eu chalcogenides (EuS, EuO) allows us to conclude that the main spectral line seen in the RE-N is a disorder induced phonon density of states like spectrum heavily weighted by the LO(L) modes. Its second harmonic 2LO(L) is also observed. The increasing frequency trend with atomic number is related to the decreasing trend in lattice constant and hence increase in force constant rather than the mass of the rare-earth ion because this phonon mode is purely a N-vibrational mode. The disorder does not arise from the spin orientations because no changes are observed upon magnetic ordering but may arise from point defects and the size of the crystallites.

© 2009 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.79.054301
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.79.054301
PACS:
63.20.dk, 78.30.−j

*Also at Ceramics Laboratory, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology-EPFL, Lausanne 1015, Switzerland.