152 research outputs found
Competition between unconventional superconductivity and incommensurate antiferromagnetic order in CeRh1-xCoxIn5
Elastic neutron diffraction measurements were performed on the quasi-two
dimensional heavy fermion system CeRh1-xCoxIn5, ranging from an incommensurate
antiferromagnet for low x to an unconventional superconductor on the Co-rich
end of the phase diagram. We found that the superconductivity competes with the
incommensurate antiferromagnetic (AFM) order characterized by qI=(1/2, 1/2,
delta) with delta=0.298, while it coexists with the commensurate AFM order with
qc=(1/2, 1/2, 1/2). This is in sharp contrast to the CeRh1-xIrxIn5 system,
where both the commensurate and incommensurate magnetic orders coexist with the
superconductivity. These results reveal that particular areas on the Fermi
surface nested by qI play an active role in forming the superconducting state
in CeCoIn5.Comment: RevTeX4, 4 pages, 4 eps figures; corrected a typo and a referenc
Dispersive Gap Mode of Phonons in Anisotropic Superconductors
We estimate the effect of the superconducting gap anisotropy in the
dispersive gap mode of phonons, which is observed by the neutron scattering on
borocarbide superconductors. We numerically analyze the phonon spectrum
considering the electron-phonon coupling, and examine contributions coming from
the gap suppression and the sign change of the pairing function on the Fermi
surface. When the sign of the pairing function is changed by the nesting
translation, the gap mode does not appear. We also discuss the suppression of
the phonon softening of the Kohn anomaly due to the onset of superconductivity.
We demonstrate that observation of the gap dispersive mode is useful for
sorting out the underlying superconducting pairing function.Comment: 7 pages, 12 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Incommensurate spin fluctuations in hole-overdoped superconductor KFe2As2
A neutron scattering study of heavily hole-overdoped superconducting
KFeAs revealed a well-defined low-energy incommensurate spin
fluctuation at [),0] with = 0.16. The incommensurate
structure differs from the previously observed commensurate peaks in
electron-doped FeAs ( = Ba, Ca, or Sr) at low energies. The
direction of the peak splitting is perpendicular to that observed in Fe(Te,Se)
or in Ba(Fe,Co)As at high energies. A band structure calculation
suggests interband scattering between bands around the and X points as
an origin of this incommensurate peak. The perpendicular direction of the peak
splitting can be understood within the framework of multiorbital band
structure. The results suggest that spin fluctuation is more robust in
hole-doped than in electron-doped samples, which can be responsible for the
appearance of superconductivity in the heavily hole-doped samples.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Evolution of spin-wave excitations in ferromagnetic metallic manganites
Neutron scattering results are presented for spin-wave excitations of three
ferromagnetic metallic MnO manganites (where and
are rare- and alkaline-earth ions), which when combined with
previous work elucidate systematics of the interactions as a function of
carrier concentration , on-site disorder, and strength of the lattice
distortion. The long wavelength spin dynamics show only a very weak dependence
across the series. The ratio of fourth to first neighbor exchange ()
that controls the zone boundary magnon softening changes systematically with
, but does not depend on the other parameters. None of the prevailing models
can account for these behaviors.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
The pairing state in KFe2As2 studied by measurements of the magnetic vortex lattice
Understanding the mechanism and symmetry of electron pairing in iron-based
superconductors represents an important challenge in condensed matter physics
[1-3]. The observation of magnetic flux lines - "vortices" - in a
superconductor can contribute to this issue, because the spatial variation of
magnetic field reflects the pairing. Unlike many other iron pnictides, our
KFe2As2 crystals have very weak vortex pinning, allowing
small-angle-neutron-scattering (SANS) observations of the intrinsic vortex
lattice (VL). We observe nearly isotropic hexagonal packing of vortices,
without VL-symmetry transitions up to high fields along the fourfold c-axis of
the crystals, indicating rather small anisotropy of the superconducting
properties around this axis. This rules out gap nodes parallel to the c-axis,
and thus d-wave and also anisotropic s-wave pairing [2, 3]. The strong
temperature-dependence of the intensity down to T<<Tc indicates either widely
different full gaps on different Fermi surface sheets, or nodal lines
perpendicular to the axis.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Lockin to Weak Ferromagnetism in TbNi2B2C and ErNi2B2C
This article describes a model in which ferromagnetism necessarily
accompanies a spin-density-wave lockin transition in the borocarbide structure
provided the commensurate phase wave vector satisfies Q = (m/n)a* with m even
and n odd. The results account for the magnetic properties of TbNi2B2C, and are
also possibly relevant also for those of ErNi2B2C.Comment: 4 page
Structure and Spin Dynamics of LaSrMnO
Neutron scattering has been used to study the structure and spin dynamics of
LaSrMnO. The magnetic structure of this system is
ferromagnetic below T_C = 235 K. We see anomalies in the Bragg peak intensities
and new superlattice peaks consistent with the onset of a spin-canted phase
below T_{CA} = 205 K, which appears to be associated with a gap at q = (0, 0,
0.5) in the spin-wave spectrum. Anomalies in the lattice parameters indicate a
concomitant lattice distortion. The long-wavelength magnetic excitations are
found to be conventional spin waves, with a gapless (< 0.02 meV) isotropic
dispersion relation . The spin stiffness constant D has a
dependence at low T, and the damping at small q follows . An
anomalously strong quasielastic component, however, develops at small wave
vector above 200 K and dominates the fluctuation spectrum as T -> T_C. At
larger q, on the other hand, the magnetic excitations become heavily damped at
low temperatures, indicating that spin waves in this regime are not eigenstates
of the system, while raising the temperature dramatically increases the
damping. The strength of the spin-wave damping also depends strongly on the
symmetry direction in the crystal. These anomalous damping effects are likely
due to the itinerant character of the electrons.Comment: 8 pages (RevTex), 9 figures (encapsulated postscript
Phase Separation in Electronic Models for Manganites
The Kondo lattice Hamiltonian with ferromagnetic Hund's coupling as a model
for manganites is investigated. The classical limit for the spin of the
(localized) electrons is analyzed on lattices of dimension 1,2,3 and
using several numerical methods. The phase diagram at low temperature
is presented. A regime is identified where phase separation occurs between hole
undoped antiferromagnetic and hole-rich ferromagnetic regions. Experimental
consequences of this novel regime are discussed. Regions of incommensurate spin
correlations have also been found. Estimations of the critical temperature in
3D are compatible with experiments.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev. Letter
Vortex lattice structure in BaFe2(As0.67P0.33)2 by the small-angle neutron scattering technique
We have observed a magnetic vortex lattice (VL) in BaFe2(As_{0.67}P_{0.33})2
(BFAP) single crystals by small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). With the field
along the c-axis, a nearly isotropic hexagonal VL was formed in the field range
from 1 to 16 T, which is a record for this technique in the pnictides, and no
symmetry changes in the VL were observed. The temperature-dependence of the VL
signal was measured and confirms the presence of (non d-wave) nodes in the
superconducting gap structure for measurements at 5 T and below. The nodal
effects were suppressed at high fields. At low fields, a VL reorientation
transition was observed between 1 T and 3 T, with the VL orientation changing
by 45{\deg}. Below 1 T, the VL structure was strongly affected by pinning and
the diffraction pattern had a fourfold symmetry. We suggest that this (and
possibly also the VL reorientation) is due to pinning to defects aligned with
the crystal structure, rather than being intrinsic.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
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