Interplay between structural and magnetic-electronic responses of FeA l 2 O 4 to a megabar: Site inversion and spin crossover

X-ray diffraction pressure studies at room temperature demonstrate that the spinel FeAl$_{2}$O$_{4}$ transforms to a tetragonal phase at ~18 GPa. This tetragonal phase has a highly irregular unit-cell volume versus pressure dependence up to ~45 GPa, after which a transformation to a Cmcm post-spinel phase is onset. This is attributable to pressure driven Fe-Al site inversion at room temperature, corroborated by signatures in the 57Fe M\"ossbauer spectroscopy pressure data. At the tetragonal to post-spinel transition, onset in the range 45-50 GPa, there is a concurrent emergence of a non-magnetic spectral component in the M\"ossbauer data at variable cryogenic temperatures. This is interpreted as spin crossover at sixfold coordinated Fe locations emanated from site inversion. Spin crossover commences at the end of the pressure range of the tetragonal phase and progresses in the post-spinel structure. There is also a much steeper volume change dV/V ~ 10% in the range 45-50 GPa compared to the preceding pressure regime, from the combined effects of the structural transition and spin crossover electronic change. At the highest pressure attained, ~106 GPa, the M\"ossbauer data evidences a diamagnetic Fe low-spin abundance of ~50%. The rest of the high-spin Fe in eightfold coordinated sites continue to experience a relatively small internal magnetic field of ~33 T. This is indicative of a magnetic ground state associated with strong covalency, as well as substantive disorder from site inversion and the mixed spin-state configuration. Intriguingly magnetism survives in such a spin-diluted post-spinel lattice at high densities. The R(300 K) data decreases by only two orders of magnitude from ambient pressure to the vicinity of ~100 GPa. Despite a ~26% unit-cell volume densification from the lattice compressibility, structural transitions and spin crossover.

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