MAGNDATA: towards a database of magnetic structures
The
quantitative characterisation of the magnetic ordering realised in magnetic
phases is an essential part of research into the magnetic properties of solids.
It is certainly fundamental for the cross-checking of theoretical models and
for the exploration of complex solid-state magnetic phenomena. Furthermore, the
determination of magnetic structures, mainly using neutron diffraction data, is
a fundamental step in the search for functional materials for magnetic and/or
magnetostructural applications. Since the first report of a magnetic structure
determined from neutron diffraction data in 1949, the magnetic structures of
thousands of compounds have been investigated and reported. In 1976, an important
effort was made to gather information available on all the magnetic structures
known at that point, and a compilation of about 1000 magnetic structures was
published. This effort continued with an additional listing of about 100
structures in 1984. Since then, experimental facilities, instruments and
analysis methods have improved enormously, and hundreds of magnetic structures
are being reported each year. It is estimated that, at the moment, there must
be about 5000 published magnetic structures. In this scenario, the convenience
of a digital database of magnetic structures seems clear, but despite some
early work in this direction, the lack of standards in the description and
communication of magnetic structures has precluded the development of an appropriate
computer database.
Two recent developments have, however, opened up new possibilities for the systematic application of magnetic symmetry and the achievement of a standardised framework for the description and digital storage of magnetic structures.
Within this framework, a group of scientists from Spain, Turkey, USA and Japan have collected at the Bilbao Crystallographic Server, under the name MAGNDATA, comprehensive information on more than 400 commensurate and incommensurate magnetic structures. MAGNDATA is intended to be a benchmark and starting point for a complete database of magnetic structures, where magnetic symmetry is systematically employed and the magCIF format is the communication file format.
In a recently published paper [Gallego et al., (2016). J. Appl. Cryst. 49, doi:10.1107/S1600576716012863] the scientists present and discuss its main features for the case of commensurate structures. They concentrate on the information made available for each structure, and the way this information can be retrieved and analysed.
Part II of this paper covering incommensurate structures will be published in the December 2016 issue of the same journal; Gallego, S.V., Perez-Mato, J.M., Elcoro, L., Tasci, E.S., Hanson, R.M., Aroyo, M.I. & Madariaga, G. (2016). J. Appl.Cryst. 49, doi:10.1107/S1600576716015491