36 research outputs found
Field induced density wave in the heavy fermion compound CeRhIn5
Metals containing Ce often show strong electron correlations due to the
proximity of the 4f state to the Fermi energy, leading to strong coupling with
the conduction electrons. This coupling typically induces a variety of
competing ground states, including heavy-fermion metals, magnetism and
unconventional superconductivity. The d-wave superconductivity in CeTMIn5
(TM=Co, Rh, Ir) has attracted significant interest due to its qualitative
similarity to the cuprate high-Tc superconductors. Here, we show evidence for a
field induced phase-transition to a state akin to a density-wave (DW) in the
heavy fermion CeRhIn5, existing in proximity to its unconventional
superconductivity. The DW state is signaled by a hysteretic anomaly in the
in-plane resistivity accompanied by the appearance of non-linear electrical
transport at high magnetic fields (>27T), which are the distinctive
characteristics of density-wave states. The unusually large hysteresis enables
us to directly investigate the Fermi surface of a supercooled electronic system
and to clearly associate a Fermi surface reconstruction with the transition.
Key to our observation is the fabrication of single crystal microstructures,
which are found to be highly sensitive to "subtle" phase transitions involving
only small portions of the Fermi surface. Such subtle order might be a common
feature among correlated electron systems, and its clear observation adds a new
perspective on the similarly subtle CDW state in the cuprates.Comment: Accepted in Nature Communication
Extreme magneto-transport of bulk carbon nanotubes in sorted electronic concentrations and aligned high performance fiber
We explored high-field (60T) magneto-resistance (MR) with two carbon nanotube (CNT) material classes: (1) unaligned single-wall CNTs (SWCNT) films with controlled metallic SWCNT concentrations and doping degree and (2) CNT fiber with aligned, long-length microstructure. All unaligned SWCNT films showed localized hopping transport where high-field MR saturation definitively supports spin polarization instead of a more prevalent wave function shrinking mechanism. Nitric acid exposure induced an insulator to metal transition and reduced the positive MR component. Aligned CNT fiber, already on the metal side of the insulator to metal transition, had positive MR without saturation and was assigned to classical MR involving electronic mobility. Subtracting high-field fits from the aligned fiber's MR yielded an unconfounded negative MR, which was assigned to weak localization. It is concluded that fluctuation induced tunnelling, an extrinsic transport model accounting for most of the aligned fiber's room temperature resistance, appears to lack MR field dependence
Upper Critical Field and Kondo Effects in Fe(Te0.9Se0.1) Thin Films by Pulsed Field Measurements
The transition temperatures of epitaxial films of Fe(Te(0:9)Se(0:1)) are remarkably insensitive to applied magnetic field, leading to predictions of upper critical fields B(c2)(T = 0) in excess of 100 T. Using pulsed magnetic fields, we find B(c2)(0) to be on the order of 45 T, similar to values in bulk material and still in excess of the paramagnetic limit. The same films show strong magnetoresistance in fields above B(c2)(T), consistent with the observed Kondo minimum seen above T(c). Fits to the temperature dependence in the context of the WHH model, using the experimental value of the Maki parameter, require an effective spin-orbit relaxation parameter of order unity. We suggest that Kondo localization plays a similar role to spin-orbit pair breaking in making WHH fits to the data
Anisotropic thermodynamic and transport properties of single crystalline CaKFeAs
Single crystalline, single phase CaKFeAs has been grown out of a
high temperature, quaternary melt. Temperature dependent measurements of x-ray
diffraction, anisotropic electrical resistivity, elastoresistivity,
thermoelectric power, Hall effect, magnetization and specific heat, combined
with field dependent measurements of electrical resistivity and field and
pressure dependent measurements of magnetization indicate that
CaKFeAs is an ordered, stoichiometric, Fe-based superconductor with
a superconducting critical temperature, = 35.0 0.2 K. Other than
superconductivity, there is no indication of any other phase transition for 1.8
K 300 K. All of these thermodynamic and transport data reveal
striking similarities to that found for optimally- or slightly over-doped
(BaK)FeAs, suggesting that stoichiometric CaKFeAs
is intrinsically close to what is referred to as "optimal-doped" on a
generalized, Fe-based superconductor, phase diagram. The anisotropic
superconducting upper critical field, , of
CaKFeAs was determined up to 630 kOe. The anisotropy parameter
, for applied
perpendicular and parallel to the c-axis, decreases from at
to at 25 K which can be explained by interplay of paramagnetic
pairbreaking and orbital effects. The slopes of
kOe/K and kOe/K at yield an electron mass anisotropy of
and short Ginzburg-Landau coherence lengths
and .
The value of can be extrapolated to
kOe, well above the BCS paramagnetic limit.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures, part of arXiv:1606.02241 is include
Fermi-surface topologies and low-temperature phases of the filled skutterudite compounds CeOs4Sb12 and NdOs4Sb12
MHz conductivity, torque magnetometer and magnetization measurements are reported on single crystals of CeOs4Sb12 and NdOs4Sb12 using temperatures down to 0.5 K and magnetic fields of up to 60 tesla. The field-orientation dependence of the de Haas-van Alphen and Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations is deduced by rotating the samples about the [010] and [0¯11] directions. The results indicate that NdOs4Sb12 has a similar Fermi surface topology to that of the unusual superconductor PrOs4Sb12, but with significantly smaller effective masses, supporting the importance of local phonon modes in contributing to the low-temperature heat capacity of NdOs4Sb12. By contrast, CeOs4Sb12 undergoes a field-induced transition from an unusual semimetal into a high-field, hightemperature state characterized by a single, almost spherical Fermi-surface section. The behavior of the phase boundary and comparisons with models of the bandstructure lead us to propose that the field-induced phase transition in CeOs4Sb12 is similar in origin to the well-known α − γ transition in Ce and its alloys