38 research outputs found

    Transport, thermal and magnetic properties of RuSr_2(Gd_{1.5}Ce_{0.5})Cu_2O_{10-\delta}, a magnetic superconductor

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    Resistivity, thermoelectric power, heat capacity and magnetization for samples of RuSr_2(Gd_{1.5}Ce_{0.5})Cu_{2}O_{10-\delta} were investigated in the temperature range 1.8-300 K with a magnetic field up to 8 T. The resistive transitions to the superconducting state are found to be determined by the inhomogeneous (granular) structure, characterized by the intragranular, T_{c0}, and intergranular, T_{cg}, transition temperatures. Heat capacity, C(T), shows a jump at the superconducting transition temperature T_{c0}\approx 37.5 K. A Schottky-like anomaly is found in C(T) below 20 K. This low temperature anomaly can be attributed to splitting of the ground term 8S7/2^{8}S_{7/2} of paramagnetic Gd^{3+} ions by internal and external magnetic fields.Comment: 3 pages (4 figs. incl.), reported at 50th Magnetism and Magnetic Materials Conference, San Jose, CA, USA, 200

    Development of a large-mass, low-threshold detector system with simultaneous measurements of athermal phonons and scintillation light

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    We have combined two low-threshold detector technologies to develop a large-mass, low-threshold detector system that simultaneously measures the athermal phonons in a sapphire detector while an adjacent silicon high-voltage detector detects the scintillation light from the sapphire detector. This detector system could provide event-by-event discrimination between electron and nuclear events due to the difference in their scintillation light yield. While such systems with simultaneous phonon and light detection have been demonstrated earlier with smaller detectors, our system is designed to provide a large detector mass with high amplification for the limited scintillation light. Future work will focus on at least an order of magnitude improvement in the light collection efficiency by having a highly reflective detector housing and custom phonon mask design to maximize light collection by the silicon high-voltage detector.Comment: 6 pages, 12 figure

    Analytical and numerical study of hardcore bosons in two dimensions

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    We study various properties of bosons in two dimensions interacting only via onsite hardcore repulsion. In particular, we use the lattice spin-wave approximation to calculate the ground state energy, the density, the condensate density and the superfluid density in terms of the chemical potential. We also calculate the excitation spectrum, ω(k)\omega({\bf k}). In addition, we performed high precision numerical simulations using the stochastic series expansion algorithm. We find that the spin-wave results describe extremely well the numerical results over the {\it whole} density range 0ρ10\leq \rho \leq 1. We also compare the lattice spin-wave results with continuum results obtained by summing the ladder diagrams at low density. We find that for ρ0.1\rho \leq 0.1 there is good agreement, and that the difference between the two methods vanishes as ρ2\rho^2 for ρ0\rho \to 0. This offers the possibility of obtaining precise continuum results by taking the continuum limit of the spin-wave results for all densities. Finaly, we studied numerically the finite temperature phase transition for the entire density range and compared with low density predictions.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures include

    Characteristic crossing point (T2.7T_{\ast}\approx 2.7 K) in specific-heat curves of samples RuSr2_2Gd1.5_{1.5}Ce0.5_{0.5}Cu2_2O10δ_{10-\delta} taken for different values of magnetic field

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    Magnetic properties of polycrystalline samples of RuSr2_2(Gd1.5_{1.5}Ce0.5_{0.5})Cu2_{2}O10δ_{10-\delta}, as-prepared (by solid-state reaction) and annealed (12 hours at 845^{\circ}C) in pure oxygen at different pressure (30, 62 and 78 atm) are presented. Specific heat and magnetization were investigated in the temperature range 1.8--300 K with a magnetic field up to 8 T. Specific heat, C(T)C(T), shows a jump at the superconducting transition (with onset at T37.5T\approx 37.5 K). Below 20 K, a Schottky-type anomaly becomes apparent in C(T)C(T). This low-temperature anomaly can be attributed to splitting of the ground term 8S7/2{^8}S_{7/2} of paramagnetic Gd3+^{3+} ions by internal and external magnetic fields. It is found that curves C(T)C(T) taken for different values of magnetic field have the same crossing point (at T2.7T_{\ast}\approx 2.7 K) for all samples studied. At the same time, C(H)C(H) curves taken for different temperatures have a crossing point at a characteristic field H3.7H_{\ast}\approx 3.7 T. These effects can be considered as manifestation of the crossing-point phenomenon which is supposed to be inherent for strongly correlated electron systems.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, submitted to J. Phys.: Condens. Matte

    Boson gas in a periodic array of tubes

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    We report the thermodynamic properties of an ideal boson gas confined in an infinite periodic array of channels modeled by two, mutually perpendicular, Kronig-Penney delta-potentials. The particle's motion is hindered in the x-y directions, allowing tunneling of particles through the walls, while no confinement along the z direction is considered. It is shown that there exists a finite Bose- Einstein condensation (BEC) critical temperature Tc that decreases monotonically from the 3D ideal boson gas (IBG) value T0T_{0} as the strength of confinement P0P_{0} is increased while keeping the channel's cross section, axaya_{x}a_{y} constant. In contrast, Tc is a non-monotonic function of the cross-section area for fixed P0P_{0}. In addition to the BEC cusp, the specific heat exhibits a set of maxima and minima. The minimum located at the highest temperature is a clear signal of the confinement effect which occurs when the boson wavelength is twice the cross-section side size. This confinement is amplified when the wall strength is increased until a dimensional crossover from 3D to 1D is produced. Some of these features in the specific heat obtained from this simple model can be related, qualitatively, to at least two different experimental situations: 4^4He adsorbed within the interstitial channels of a bundle of carbon nanotubes and superconductor-multistrand-wires Nb3_{3}Sn.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, submitte

    Possible experiment for determination of the role of microscopic vortex rings in the \lambda-transition in He-II

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    It is suggested that microscopic vortex rings (MVR) play an important role in the \lambda-transition in helium-II and substantially determine the value of T_{\lambda}. For very thin films of He-II, with thickness d less than the size of the smallest MVR, the rings do not fit in and, therefore, do not exist in such films. Consequently, for superfluid films of He-II, a peculiarity in the form of a smoothed-out jump should be observed in the curve T_{m}(d) at the values of thickness approximately equal to the size of the smallest MVR, d= 3 - 9 A (T_{m} is the temperature of the maximum of the broad peak on the curve of the dependence of the specific heat on temperature). The absence of a similar peculiarity will be an evidence that MVR do not influence the values of T_{\lambda} and T_{m}, and do not play any key role in the \lambda-transition. The currently available experimental data are insufficient for revealing the predicted peculiarity.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure

    Muon spin relaxation studies of incommensurate magnetism and superconductivity in stage-4 La2_{2}CuO4.11_{4.11} and La1.88_{1.88}Sr0.12_{0.12}CuO4_{4}

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    This paper reports muon spin relaxation (MuSR) measurements of two single crystals of the title high-Tc cuprate systems where static incommensurate magnetism and superconductivity coexist. By zero-field MuSR measurements and subsequent analyses with simulations, we show that (1) the maximum ordered Cu moment size (0.36 Bohr magneton) and local spin structure are identical to those in prototypical stripe spin systems with the 1/8 hole concentration; (2) the static magnetism is confined to less than a half of the volume of the sample, and (3) regions with static magnetism form nano-scale islands with the size comparable to the in-plane superconducting coherence length. By transverse-field MuSR measurements, we show that Tc of these systems is related to the superfluid density, in the same way as observed in cuprate systems without static magnetism. We discuss a heuristic model involving percolation of these nanoscale islands with static magnetism as a possible picture to reconcile heterogeneity found by the present MuSR study and long-range spin correlations found by neutron scattering.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B. E-mail: [email protected]

    1H NMR-based metabolomics combined with HPLC-PDA-MS-SPE-NMR for investigation of standardized Ginkgo biloba preparations

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    Commercial preparations of Ginkgo biloba are very complex mixtures prepared from raw leaf extracts by a series of extraction and prepurification steps. The pharmacological activity is attributed to a number of flavonoid glycosides and unique terpene trilactones (TTLs), with largely uncharacterized pharmacological profiles on targets involved in neurological disorders. It is therefore important to complement existing targeted analytical methods for analysis of Ginkgo biloba preparations with alternative technology platforms for their comprehensive and global characterization. In this work, 1H NMR-based metabolomics and hyphenation of high-performance liquid chromatography, photo-diode array detection, mass spectrometry, solid-phase extraction, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (HPLC-PDA-MS-SPE-NMR) were used for investigation of 16 commercially available preparations of Ginkgo biloba. The standardized extracts originated from Denmark, Italy, Sweden, and United Kingdom, and the results show that 1H NMR spectra allow simultaneous assessment of the content as well as identity of flavonoid glycosides and TTLs based on a very simple sample-preparation procedure consisting of extraction, evaporation and reconstitution in acetone-d6. Unexpected or unwanted extract constituents were also easily identified in the 1H NMR spectra, which contrasts traditional methods that depend on UV absorption or MS ionizability and usually require availability of reference standards. Automated integration of 1H NMR spectral segments (buckets or bins of 0.02 ppm width) provides relative distribution plots of TTLs based on their H-12 resonances. The present study shows that 1H NMR-based metabolomics is an attractive method for non-selective and comprehensive analysis of Ginkgo extracts
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