Abstract
Mössbauer results obtained at 300 and 4.2 K for Fe57 in alloys of 2-40 at.% iron in gold have been fitted with consistent values for the hyperfine interactions. The 300-K data are adequately fitted using a reducing-point-charge model based on a Thomas-Fermi-like model for the iron screening in gold, and the derived parameters are used in fitting the 4.2-K data. The sign of the electric field gradient is deduced to be negative, and information concerning the magnetic moment alignment with different numbers of neighbors is derived. The spins point along 111 crystallographic directions when the atom has two or more iron neighbors, and along directions normal to the iron-iron axis when it has one neighbor. With increased size of groups of atoms the spins point along the 111 axis that minimizes the number of Fe-Fe axes normal to it, until at about 16 at.% iron long-range ferromagnetism occurs due to the occurrence of linear chains. The results for higher-concentration alloys are consistent with those expected for a ferromagnetic random alloy.