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NEWS
December 2023 ESRFnews
Researchers in Germany have found
that a first-order magnetic transition
in alloys takes place in two steps.
The work opens a new pathway to
disentangle the interplay between
structural, magnetic, and electronic
degrees of freedom in such transitions.
Alloys with a first-order magnetic
transition play an important role
in the manufacturing of advanced
refrigeration systems, sensors and
other devices. The transition is unique
because it happens suddenly, and is
connected to how the magnetic part, the
electronic part, and the structural part of
a material all work together. In principle,
it can cross several metastable states
– at one point taking place within
the magnetic subsystem, while at
another taking place in the structural or
electronic subsystems.
With the aim to disentangle the
nature of the first-order magnetic
transition, researchers led by the
University of Darmstadt designed two
new experimental set-ups, allowing
the simultaneous measurement
of magnetisation, longitudinal and
transversal magnetostriction, and
temperature change of the sample.
They then carried out simultaneous
measurements of a lanthanum–iron–
silicon (LaFe
11.8
Si
1.2
) alloy in the lab,
before coming to the ESRF to perform
X-ray absorption spectroscopy
(XANES) and X-ray magnetic circular
dichroism (XMCD) experiments at the
ID12 beamline (below).
The researchers found that the
magnetic change does not happen at
once, but instead takes place in two
separate steps: the first defined purely
by magnetic contribution; the second
with participation by both the magnetic
and structural subsystems (Appl. Phys.
Rev. 10 031408).
Magnetic alloys take two
steps to transition
A team based in France has used ESRF
techniques to uncover an unusual and
unstable component in Leonardo Da
Vinci’s Mona Lisa. They believe the
addition was part of an effort by the
Italian Renaissance painter to create
a thick paint that would cover the
wooden panel behind his most famous
masterpiece.
Leonardo Da Vinci experimented
with innovative techniques in his oil
paintings. In each of his artistic works,
the materials used and the build-up of
layers are different. But while he wrote
numerous manuscripts about his other
interests in areas such as engineering
or architecture, he left very few clues
about his painting materials.
Now researchers from various
French institutions including
the CNRS Supramolecular and
Macromolecular Photophysics
and Photochemistry Laboratory
at the École normale supérieure
ParisSaclay the National Centre
for Research and Restoration in
French Museums C2RMF and
the Musée du Louvre have brought
a microsample of the preparation
layer of the Mona Lisa to the ESRF
ID22 ID13 and ID21 beamlines for
analysis by synchrotron radiation
highangular resolution Xray powder
diffraction, micro X-ray diffraction
and micro Fourier-transform infrared
spectroscopy. For comparison, they
also brought several fragments from
another of Leonardo’s masterpieces,
The Last Supper.
The team discovered a relatively
high amount of plumbonacrite,
an usual compound that they had
previously identified in a study of The
Night Watch by the Dutch Golden
Age painter Rembrandt van Rijn,
painted two centuries later. At first,
Leonardo’s manuscripts proved to
be of little use, especially given the
different terminologies he used, but
eventually the researchers found a
reference to the compound in the
context of a pharmaceutical practice.
They believe it was formed by a
specific mix of oil with lead oxide and
that Leonardo intentionally used it in
his paintings to create a thick opaque
ground layer J Am Chem Soc DOI
101021jacs3c07000
We faced the additional challenge
that there are very few scientific
analyses of the Mona Lisa and of
Leonardos paintings in general so
it was difficult for us to compare our
results with previous studies says
Marine Cotte scientist in charge of
the ID21 beamline
Behind the
enigmatic smile,
the chemical
compound
plumbonacrite,
possibly to help
cover up the
wooden paint
board.
I. F A Z L I C, M. C O T T E & V. G O N Z A L E Z
Mona Lisa hides unusual compound
E S R F/P.J A Y E T