134 research outputs found
Phonon-mediated tuning of instabilities in the Hubbard model at half-filling
We obtain the phase diagram of the half-filled two-dimensional Hubbard model
on a square lattice in the presence of Einstein phonons. We find that the
interplay between the instantaneous electron-electron repulsion and
electron-phonon interaction leads to new phases. In particular, a
d-wave superconducting phase emerges when both anisotropic phonons
and repulsive Hubbard interaction are present. For large electron-phonon
couplings, charge-density-wave and s-wave superconducting regions also appear
in the phase diagram, and the widths of these regions are strongly dependent on
the phonon frequency, indicating that retardation effects play an important
role. Since at half-filling the Fermi surface is nested, spin-density-wave is
recovered when the repulsive interaction dominates. We employ a functional
multiscale renormalization-group method that includes both electron-electron
and electron-phonon interactions, and take retardation effects fully into
account.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Raman scattering study of electron-doped PrCaFeAs superconductors
Temperature-dependent polarized Raman spectra of electron-doped
superconducting PrCaFeAs () single crystals
are reported. All four allowed by symmetry even-parity phonons are identified.
Phonon mode of B symmetry at 222 cm, which is associated with the
c-axis motion of Fe ions, is found to exhibit an anomalous frequency hardening
at low temperatures, that signals non-vanishing electron-phonon coupling in the
superconducting state and implies that the superconducting gap magnitude
meV.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
A Field-Induced Re-Entrant Novel Phase and A Ferroelectric-Magnetic Order Coupling in HoMnO3
A re-entrant novel phase has been observed in the hexagonal ferroelectric
HoMnO3 in the presence of magnetic fields, in the temperature ranges defined by
the plateau of the dielectric constant anomaly. The dielectric plateau evolves
with fields from a narrow sharp dielectric peak at the Mn-spin rotation
transition at 32.8 K in zero magnetic field. Such a field-induced dielectric
plateau anomaly appears both in the temperature sweep at a constant field and
in the field sweep at a constant temperature without detectable hysteresis.
This is attributed to the indirect coupling between the ferroelectric and
antiferromagnetic orders, arising from an antiferromagnetic domain wall effect,
where the magnetic order parameter of the Mn subsystem has to change sign
across the ferroelectric domain wall in the compound, that influences the
ferroelectric domains via a local magnetostrictive effect
Raman scattering study of (KSr)FeAs ( = 0.0, 0.4)
Polarized Raman spectra of non-superconducting SrFeAs and
superconducting KSrFeAs ( K) are reported.
All four phonon modes (A + B + 2E) allowed by symmetry, are
found and identified. Shell model gives reasonable description of the spectra.
No detectable anomalies are observed near the tetragonal-to-orthorhombic
transition in SrFeAs or the superconducting transition in
KSrFeAs.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Thermoelectric properties of Zn_5Sb_4In_(2-δ)(δ=0.15)
The polymorphic intermetallic compound Zn_5Sb_4In_(2−δ) (δ = 0.15(3)) shows promising thermoelectric properties at low temperatures, approaching a figure of merit ZT of 0.3 at 300 K. However, thermopower and electrical resistivity changes discontinuously at around 220 K. Measurement of the specific heat locates the previously unknown temperature of the order-disorder phase transition at around 180 K. Investigation of the charge carrier concentration and mobility by Hall measurements and infrared reflection spectroscopy indicate a mixed conduction behavior and the activation of charge carriers at temperatures above 220 K. Zn_5Sb_4In_(2−δ) has a low thermal stability, and at temperatures above 470 K samples decompose into a mixture of Zn, InSb, and Zn_4Sb_3
Spectroscopy of infrared-active phonons in high-temperature superconductors
For a large variety of superconducting materials both experimental and theoretical lattice dynamical studies have been performed to date. The assignment of the observed infrared- and Raman-active phonon modes to the particular lattice eigenmodes is generally accepted. We will concentrate here upon the analysis of the changes of the infrared-phonon parameters (frequency and linewidth) upon entering the superconducting state which, as will be shown, may provide information on the magnitude of the superconductivity-related gap and its dependence on the superconducting transition temperature Tc
Comparative Raman Studies of Sr2RuO4, Sr3Ru2O7 and Sr4Ru3O10
The polarized Raman spectra of layered ruthenates of the Srn+1RunO3n+1
(n=1,2,3) Ruddlesden-Popper series were measured between 10 and 300 K. The
phonon spectra of Sr3Ru2O7 and Sr4Ru3O10 confirmed earlier reports for
correlated rotations of neighboring RuO6 octahedra within double or triple
perovskite blocks. The observed Raman lines of Ag or B1g symmetry were assigned
to particular atomic vibrations by considering the Raman modes in simplified
structures with only one double or triple RuO6 layer per unit cell and by
comparison to the predictions of lattice dynamical calculations for the real
Pban and Pbam structures. Along with discrete phonon lines, a continuum
scattering, presumably of electronic origin, is present in the zz, xx and xy,
but not in the x'y' and zx spectra. Its interference with phonons results in
Fano shape for some of the lines in the xx and xy spectra. The temperature
dependencies of phonon parameters of Sr3Ru2O7 exhibit no anomaly between 10 and
300 K where no magnetic transition occurs. In contrast, two B1g lines in the
spectra of Sr4Ru3O10, corresponding to oxygen vibrations modulating the Ru-O-Ru
bond angle, show noticeable hardening with ferromagnetic ordering at 105 K,
thus indicating strong spin-phonon interaction.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
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