60 research outputs found

    Field induced density wave in the heavy fermion compound CeRhIn5

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    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

    Intertwined Orders in Heavy-Fermion Superconductor CeCoIn5_5

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    The appearance of spin-density-wave (SDW) magnetic order in the low-temperature and high-field corner of the superconducting phase diagram of CeCoIn5_5 is unique among unconventional superconductors. The nature of this magnetic QQ phase is a matter of current debate. Here, we present the thermal conductivity of CeCoIn5_5 in a rotating magnetic field, which reveals the presence of an additional order inside the QQ phase that is intimately intertwined with the superconducting dd-wave and SDW orders. A discontinuous change of the thermal conductivity within the QQ phase, when the magnetic field is rotated about antinodes of the superconducting dd-wave order parameter, demands that the additional order must change abruptly together with the recently observed switching of the SDW. A combination of interactions, where spin-orbit coupling orients the SDW, which then selects the secondary pp-wave pair-density-wave component (with an average amplitude of 20\% of the primary dd-wave order parameter), accounts for the observed behavior

    LDA+DMFT Approach to Magnetocrystalline Anisotropy of Strong Magnets

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    The new challenges posed by the need of finding strong rare-earth free magnets demand methods that can predict magnetization and magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy (MAE). We argue that correlated electron effects, which are normally underestimated in band structure calculations, play a crucial role in the development of the orbital component of the magnetic moments. Because magnetic anisotropy arises from this orbital component, the ability to include correlation effects has profound consequences on our predictive power of the MAE of strong magnets. Here we show that incorporating the local effects of electronic correlations with dynamical mean-field theory provides reliable estimates of the orbital moment, the mass enhancement and the MAE of YCo5.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, published versio

    BaT2As2 Single Crystals (T = Fe, Co, Ni) and Superconductivity upon Co-doping

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    The crystal structure and physical properties of BaFe2As2, BaCo2As2, and BaNi2As2 single crystals are surveyed. BaFe2As2 gives a magnetic and structural transition at TN = 132(1) K, BaCo2As2 is a paramagnetic metal, while BaNi2As2 has a structural phase transition at T0 = 131 K, followed by superconductivity below Tc = 0.69 K. The bulk superconductivity in Co-doped BaFe2As2 below Tc = 22 K is demonstrated by resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, and specific heat data. In contrast to the cuprates, the Fe-based system appears to tolerate considerable disorder in the transition metal layers. First principles calculations for BaFe1.84Co0.16As2 indicate the inter-band scattering due to Co is weak.Comment: Accepted to Physica

    Large magnetic penetration depth and thermal fluctuations in a Ca10_{10}(Pt3_{3}As8_{8})[(Fe1−x_{1-x}Ptx_{x})2_{2}As2_{2}]5_{5} (x=0.097) single crystal

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    We have measured the temperature dependence of the absolute value of the magnetic penetration depth λ(T)\lambda(T) in a Ca10_{10}(Pt3_{3}As8_{8})[(Fe1−x_{1-x}Ptx_{x})2_{2}As2_{2}]5_{5} (x=0.097) single crystal using a low-temperature magnetic force microscope (MFM). We obtain λab\lambda_{ab}(0)≈\approx1000 nm via extrapolating the data to T=0T = 0. This large λ\lambda and pronounced anisotropy in this system are responsible for large thermal fluctuations and the presence of a liquid vortex phase in this low-temperature superconductor with critical temperature of 11 K, consistent with the interpretation of the electrical transport data. The superconducting parameters obtained from λ\lambda and coherence length ξ\xi place this compound in the extreme type \MakeUppercase{\romannumeral 2} regime. Meissner responses (via MFM) at different locations across the sample are similar to each other, indicating good homogeneity of the superconducting state on a sub-micron scale
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