177 research outputs found

    Iron substitution in NdCoAsO: crystal structure and magnetic phase diagram

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    The effects of replacing small amounts of Co with Fe in NdCoAsO are reported. Polycrystalline materials with compositions NdCo1-xFexAsO (x = 0.05, 0.10, 0.15, and 0.20) are studied and the results compared to previous reports for NdCoAsO. Rietveld analysis of powder x-ray diffraction data shows that as Fe replaces Co on the transition metal (T) site, the T-As distance increases, and the As tetrahedra surrounding the T-site become more regular. Electrical resistivity and magnetization measurements indicate that the three magnetic phase transitions in NdCoAsO are suppressed as Co is replaced by Fe, and these transitions are not observed above 1.8 K for x = 0.20. Based on these results, the magnetic phase diagram for the Co-rich side of the NdCoAsO-NdFeAsO system is constructed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review B, revised text and figures, 5 pages, 5 figure

    Tunneling spin valves based on Fe3_3GeTe2_2/hBN/Fe3_3GeTe2_2 van der Waals heterostructures

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    Thin van der Waals (vdW) layered magnetic materials disclose the possibility to realize vdW heterostructures with new functionalities. Here we report on the realization and investigation of tunneling spin valves based on van der Waals heterostructures consisting of an atomically thin hBN layer acting as tunnel barrier and two exfoliated Fe3GeTe2 crystals acting as ferromagnetic electrodes. Low-temperature anomalous Hall effect measurements show that thin Fe3GeTe2 crystals are metallic ferromagnets with an easy axis perpendicular to the layers, and a very sharp magnetization switching at magnetic field values that depend slightly on their geometry. In Fe3GeTe2/hBN/Fe3GeTe2 heterostructures, we observe a textbook behavior of the tunneling resistance, which is minimum (maximum) when the magnetization in the two electrodes is parallel (antiparallel) to each other. The magnetoresistance is 160% at low temperature, from which we determine the spin polarization of Fe3GeTe2 to be 0.66, corresponding to 83% and 17% of majority and minority carriers, respectively. The measurements also show that, with increasing temperature, the evolution of the spin polarization extracted from the tunneling magnetoresistance is proportional to the temperature dependence of the magnetization extracted from the analysis of the anomalous Hall conductivity. This suggests that the magnetic properties of the surface are representative of those of the bulk, as it may be expected for vdW materials.Comment: 4 figure

    Many-body effects in nonlinear optical responses of 2D layered semiconductors

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    We performed ultrafast degenerate pump-probe spectroscopy on monolayer WSe2 near its exciton resonance. The observed differential reflectance signals exhibit signatures of strong many-body interactions including the exciton-exciton interaction and free carrier induced band gap renormalization. The exciton-exciton interaction results in a resonance blue shift which lasts for the exciton lifetime (several ps), while the band gap renormalization manifests as a resonance red shift with several tens ps lifetime. Our model based on the many-body interactions for the nonlinear optical susceptibility fits well the experimental observations. The power dependence of the spectra shows that with the increase of pump power, the exciton population increases linearly and then saturates, while the free carrier density increases superlinearly, implying that exciton Auger recombination could be the origin of these free carriers. Our model demonstrates a simple but efficient method for quantitatively analyzing the spectra, and indicates the important role of Coulomb interactions in nonlinear optical responses of such 2D materials

    Superconductivity at 22 K in Co-doped BaFe2As2 Crystals

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    Here we report bulk superconductivity in BaFe1.8Co0.2As2 single crystals below Tc = 22 K, as demonstrated by resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, and specific heat data. Hall data indicate that the dominant carriers are electrons, as expected from simple chemical reasoning. This is the first example of superconductivity induced by electron doping in this family of materials. In contrast to the cuprates, the BaFe2As2 system appears to tolerate considerable disorder in the FeAs planes. First principles calculations for BaFe1.8Co0.2As2 indicate the inter-band scattering due to Co is weak.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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