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91̽»¨
CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

David Keen

Visiting Professor

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • X-ray and neutron scattering
david.keen@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72310
Clarendon Laboratory, room 106
  • About
  • Publications

Liquid phase blending of metal-organic frameworks

Nature Communications Springer Nature 9:1 (2018) 2135

Authors:

Louis Longley, Sean M Collins, Chao Zhou, Glen J Smales, Sarah E Norman, Nick J Brownbill, Christopher W Ashling, Philip A Chater, Robert Tovey, Carola-Bibiane Schönlieb, Thomas F Headen, Nicholas J Terrill, Yuanzheng Yue, Andrew J Smith, Frédéric Blanc, David A Keen, Paul A Midgley, Thomas D Bennett

Dimensional crossover of correlated anion disorder in oxynitride perovskites

Chemical Communications Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 54:41 (2018) 5245-5247

Authors:

Hannah Johnston, Ashley P Black, Paula Kayser, Judith Oró-Solé, David A Keen, Amparo Fuertes, J Paul Attfield

Neutron and X-ray total scattering study of hydrogen disorder in fully hydrated hydrogrossular, Ca3Al2(O4H4)3

Physics and Chemistry of Minerals Springer Nature 45:4 (2018) 333-342

Authors:

David A Keen, Dean S Keeble, Thomas D Bennett

Structural investigations of amorphous metal–organic frameworks formed via different routes

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 20:11 (2018) 7857-7861

Authors:

DA Keen, TD Bennett

Magnetic structure of paramagnetic MnO

Physical Review B American Physical Society 97:1 (2018) 014429

Authors:

JAM Paddison, MJ Gutmann, MT Dove, DA Keen, Andrew Goodwin

Abstract:

Using a combination of single-crystal neutron scattering and reverse Monte Carlo refinements, we study the magnetic structure of paramagnetic MnO at a temperature (160 K) substantially below the Curie-Weiss temperature |θ|∼550 K. The microscopic picture we develop reveals a locally ordered domain structure that persists over distances many times larger than the correlation length implied by direct analysis of the spin-correlation function. Moreover, the directional dependence of paramagnetic spin correlations in paramagnetic MnO differs in some important respects from that of its incipient ordered antiferromagnetic state. Our results demonstrate that atomistic refinement to large three-dimensional neutron-scattering datasets is a practical approach, and have implications for the understanding of paramagnetic states in weakly frustrated systems, including high-temperature superconductors.

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