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Deep melting reveals liquid structural memory and anomalous ferromagnetism in bismuth.
Title Deep melting reveals liquid structural memory and anomalous ferromagnetism in bismuth.
Authors Shu, Y.; Yu, D.; Hu, W.; Wang, Y.; Shen, G.; Kono, Y.; Xu, B.; He, J.; Liu, Z.; Tian, Y.
Journal Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
DOI 10.1073/pnas.1615874114
Abstract

As an archetypal semimetal with complex and anisotropic Fermi surface and unusual electric properties (e.g., high electrical resistance, large magnetoresistance, and giant Hall effect), bismuth (Bi) has played a critical role in metal physics. In general, Bi displays diamagnetism with a high volumetric susceptibility (10(-4)). Here, we report unusual ferromagnetism in bulk Bi samples recovered from a molten state at pressures of 1.4-2.5 GPa and temperatures above 1,250 K. The ferromagnetism is associated with a surprising structural memory effect in the molten state. On heating, low-temperature Bi liquid (L) transforms to a more randomly disordered high-temperature liquid (L') around 1,250 K. By cooling from above 1,250 K, certain structural characteristics of liquid L' are preserved in L. Bi clusters with characteristics of the liquid L' motifs are further preserved through solidification into the Bi-II phase across the pressure-independent melting curve, which may be responsible for the observed ferromagnetism.