38 research outputs found
Magnetization under High Pressure in MnSi
The magnetization M(H) has been measured in the weakly helimagnetic itinerant
compound MnSi under high pressure up to 10.2 kbar and high magnetic field up to
9 Tesla. We interpret the simultaneous decrease under pressure of the saturated
magnetization, , and the Curie temperature, in the frame of the
self-consistent renormalization theory (SCR) of spin fluctuations. From the
analysis of the so-called Arrot-plot ( versus ) and
the respective volume dependence of and , we estimate the evolution
of the characteristic spin fluctuation temperatures, and when the
system approaches its critical pressure, =15 kbar, corresponding to the
disappearance of the long range magnetic order at T=0.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Phase Inhomogeneity of the Itinerant Ferromagnet MnSi at High Pressures
The pressure induced quantum phase transition of the weakly itinerant
ferromagnet MnSi is studied using zero-field NMR spectroscopy and
relaxation. Below , the intensity of the signal and the
nuclear spin-lattice relaxation is independent of pressure, even though the
amplitude of the magnetization drops by 20% from the ambient pressure
amplitude. For , the decreasing intensity within the experimentally
detectable bandwidth signals the onset of an inhomogeneous phase that persists
to the highest pressure measured, , which is well beyond the
known critical pressure . Implications for the non-Fermi Liquid
behavior observed for are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Implications of the B20 Crystal Structure for the Magneto-electronic Structure of MnSi
Due to increased interest in the unusual magnetic and transport behavior of
MnSi and its possible relation to its crystal structure (B20) which has unusual
coordination and lacks inversion symmetry, we provide a detailed analysis of
the electronic and magnetic structure of MnSi. The non-symmorphic P2_13
spacegroup leads to unusual fourfold degenerate states at the zone corner R
point, as well as ``sticking'' of pairs of bands throughout the entire
Brillouin zone surface. The resulting Fermi surface acquires unusual features
as a result of the band sticking. For the ferromagnetic system (neglecting the
long wavelength spin spiral) with the observed moment of 0.4 \mu_B/Mn, one of
the fourfold levels at R in the minority bands falls at the Fermi energy (E_F),
and a threefold majority level at k=0 also falls at E_F. The band sticking and
presence of bands with vanishing velocity at E_F imply an unusually large phase
space for long wavelength, low energy interband transitions that will be
important for understanding the unusual resistivity and far infrared optical
behavior.Comment: Nine two-column pages with eight figures include
Pressure-induced unconventional superconductivity in the heavy-fermion antiferromagnet CeIn3: An 115In-NQR study under pressure
We report on the pressure-induced unconventional superconductivity in the
heavy-fermion antiferromagnet CeIn3 by means of nuclear-quadrupole-resonance
(NQR) studies conducted under a high pressure. The temperature and pressure
dependences of the NQR spectra have revealed a first-order quantum-phase
transition (QPT) from an AFM to PM at a critical pressure Pc=2.46 GPa. Despite
the lack of an AFM quantum critical point in the P-T phase diagram, we
highlight the fact that the unconventional SC occurs in both phases of the AFM
and PM. The nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T1 in the AFM phase have
provided evidence for the uniformly coexisting AFM+SC phase. In the HF-PM phase
where AFM fluctuations are not developed, 1/T1 decreases without the coherence
peak just below Tc, followed by a power-law like T dependence that indicates an
unconventional SC with a line-node gap. Remarkably, Tc has a peak around Pc in
the HF-PM phase as well as in the AFM phase. In other words, an SC dome exists
with a maximum value of Tc = 230 mK around Pc, indicating that the origin of
the pressure-induced HF SC in CeIn3 is not relevant to AFM spin fluctuations
but to the emergence of the first-order QPT in CeIn3. When the AFM critical
temperature is suppressed at the termination point of the first-order QPT, Pc =
2.46 GPa, the diverging AFM spin-density fluctuations emerge at the critical
point from the AFM to PM. The results with CeIn3 leading to a new type of
quantum criticality deserve further theoretical investigations
Huge Enhancement of Impurity Scattering due to Critical Valence Fluctuations in a Ce-Based Heavy Electron System
On the basis of the Ward-Pitaevskii identity, the residual resistivity
is shown to exhibit huge enhancement around the quantum critical
point of valence transition in Ce-based heavy electron systems. This explains a
sharp peak of observed in CeCuGe under the pressure at
16GPa where the superconducting trasition temperature also exhibit the
sharp peak.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Singular Effects of Impurities near the Ferromagnetic Quantum-Critical Point
Systematic theoretical results for the effects of a dilute concentration of
magnetic impurities on the thermodynamic and transport properties in the region
around the quantum critical point of a ferromagnetic transition are obtained.
In the quasi-classical regime, the dynamical spin fluctuations enhance the
Kondo temperature. This energy scale decreases rapidly in the quantum
fluctuation regime, where the properties are those of a line of critical points
of the multichannel Kondo problem with the number of channels increasing as the
critical point is approached, except at unattainably low temperatures where a
single channel wins out.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
New Superconducting and Magnetic Phases Emerge on the Verge of Antiferromagnetism in CeIn
We report the discovery of new superconducting and novel magnetic phases in
CeIn on the verge of antiferromagnetism (AFM) under pressure () through
the In-nuclear quadrupole resonance (NQR) measurements. We have found a
-induced phase separation of AFM and paramagnetism (PM) without any trace
for a quantum phase transition in CeIn. A new type of superconductivity
(SC) was found in GPa to coexist with AFM that is magnetically
separated from PM where the heavy fermion SC takes place. We propose that the
magnetic excitations such as spin-density fluctuations induced by the
first-order magnetic phase transition might mediate attractive interaction to
form Cooper pairs.Comment: 4 pages, 4 EPS figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Enhanced Impurity Scattering due to Quantum Critical Fluctuations
It is shown on the basis of the lowest order perturbation expansion with
respect to critical fluctuations that the critical fluctuations give rise to an
enhancement of the potential scattering of non-magnetic impurities. This
qualitatively accounts for the enhancement of the resistivity due to impurities
which has been observed in variety of systems near the quantum critical point,
while the higher order processes happen to give much larger enhancement as seen
from the Ward identity arguments. The cases with dynamical critical exponent
=2 and =3 are discussed explicitly.Comment: Submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. on 27 September, 200