258 research outputs found
The effect of Cr impurity to superconductivity in electron-doped BaFe2-xNixAs2
We use transport and magnetization measurements to study the effect of
Cr-doping to the phase diagram of the electron-doped superconducting
BaFe2-xNixAs2 iron pnictides. In principle, adding Cr to electron-doped
BaFe2-xNixAs2 should be equivalent to the effect of hole-doping. However, we
find that Cr doping suppresses superconductivity via impurity effect, while not
affecting the normal state resistivity above 100 K. We establish the phase
diagram of Cr-doped BaFe2-x-yNixCryAs2 iron pnictides, and demonstrate that
Cr-doping near optimal superconductivity restore the long-range
antiferromagnetic order suppressed by superconductivity.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Strain-Induced Spin-Nematic State and Nematic Susceptibility Arising from 2×2 Fe Clusters in KFe_{0.8}Ag_{1.2}Te_{2}.
Spin nematics break spin-rotational symmetry while maintaining time-reversal symmetry, analogous to liquid crystal nematics that break spatial rotational symmetry while maintaining translational symmetry. Although several candidate spin nematics have been proposed, the identification and characterization of such a state remain challenging because the spin-nematic order parameter does not couple directly to experimental probes. KFe_{0.8}Ag_{1.2}Te_{2} (K_{5}Fe_{4}Ag_{6}Te_{10}, KFAT) is a local-moment magnet consisting of well-separated 2×2 Fe clusters, and in its ground state the clusters order magnetically, breaking both spin-rotational and time-reversal symmetries. Using uniform magnetic susceptibility and neutron scattering measurements, we find a small strain induces sizable spin anisotropy in the paramagnetic state of KFAT, manifestly breaking spin-rotational symmetry while retaining time-reversal symmetry, resulting in a strain-induced spin-nematic state in which the 2×2 clusters act as the spin analog of molecules in a liquid crystal nematic. The strain-induced spin anisotropy in KFAT allows us to probe its nematic susceptibility, revealing a divergentlike increase upon cooling, indicating the ordered ground state is driven by a spin-orbital entangled nematic order parameter
Electronic specific heat in BaFeNiAs
We have systematically studied the low-temperature specific heat of the
BaFeNiAs single crystals covering the whole superconducting
dome. Using the nonsuperconducting heavily overdoped x = 0.3 sample as a
reference for the phonon contribution to the specific heat, we find that the
normal-state electronic specific heats in the superconducting samples may have
a nonlinear temperature dependence, which challenges previous results in the
electron-doped Ba-122 iron-based superconductors. A model based on the presence
of ferromagnetic spin fluctuations may explain the data between x = 0.1 and x =
0.15, suggesting the important role of Fermi-surface topology in understanding
the normal-state electronic states.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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