23 research outputs found
Magnetic susceptibility of YBa2Cu3 O6+x crystals: Unusual Curie behavior and small contributions from charge density waves
© 2016 American Physical Society. We report measurements of the magnetic susceptibility of twinned single crystals of YBa2Cu3O6+x from just above their superconducting transition temperatures to 300 K with magnetic fields of up to 5 T applied parallel and perpendicular to the CuO2 planes at seven values of x. Appropriate analysis allows the relatively small, but still important, Curie terms to be separated from other contributions to the susceptibility. Our data support a picture in which the Curie terms arise from oxygen disorder in the Cu-O chains. This agrees with published work on polycrystalline samples where the sample cooling rate was varied, but here we show that the Curie plots flatten out above 200 K. We identify small effects of charge density wave (CDW) instabilities in the temperature (T) derivative of the in-plane susceptibility dχab(T)/dT and discuss their x dependence. For x=0.67 we make a detailed comparison with published high energy x-ray diffraction data using a minimal model involving Fermi arcs, thereby obtaining values for the CDW energy gap and the Helmholtz free energy in a coherence volume. At 80 and 100 K the latter is comparable with, or smaller than, kBT, respectively, highlighting the probable importance of thermal fluctuations. We note that the effect of the Lorentz force on charge carriers in the Fermi arcs could provide a simple mechanism for enhancing the CDWs in high magnetic fields, as suggested by recent experiments
Nonlocal vortex motion in mesoscopic amorphous Nb0.7Ge0.3 structures
We study nonlocal vortex transport in mesoscopic amorphous Nb0.7Ge0.3
samples. A dc current I is passed through a wire connected via a perpendicular
channel, of a length L= 2-5 um, with a pair of voltage probes where a nonlocal
response Vnl ~ I is measured. The maximum of Rnl=Vnl/I for a given temperature
occurs at an L-independent magnetic field and is proportional to 1/L. The
results are interpreted in terms of the dissipative vortex motion along the
channel driven by a remote current, and can be understood in terms of a simple
model.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Quantum oscillations of the magnetic torque in the nodal-line Dirac semimetal ZrSiS
We report a study of quantum oscillations (QO) in the magnetic torque of the
nodal-line Dirac semimetal ZrSiS in the magnetic fields up to 35 T and the
temperature range from 40 K down to 2 K, enabling high resolution mapping of
the Fermi surface (FS) topology in the (Z-R-A) plane of the first
Brillouin zone (FBZ). It is found that the oscillatory part of the measured
magnetic torque signal consists of low frequency (LF) contributions
(frequencies up to 1000 T) and high frequency (HF) contributions (several
clusters of frequencies from 7-22 kT). Increased resolution and angle-resolved
measurements allow us to show that the high oscillation frequencies originate
from magnetic breakdown (MB) orbits involving clusters of individual
hole and electron pockets from the diamond shaped FS in the Z-R-A
plane. Analyzing the HF oscillations we have unequivocally shown that the QO
frequency from the dog-bone shaped Fermi pocket ( pocket) amounts
T. Our findings suggest that most of the frequencies in the LF
part of QO can also be explained by MB orbits when intraband tunneling in the
dog-bone shaped electron pocket is taken into account. Our results give
a new understanding of the novel properties of the FS of the nodal-line Dirac
semimetal ZrSiS and sister compounds
Transport properties of hydrogen-doped (Zr 80 3d 20 ) 1-x H x (3d = Co, Ni) metallic glasses
The electrical resistivities of hydrogen-doped (Zr 80 3d 20 ) 1-x H x (3d = Ni, Co; x ≤ 0.11) metallic glasses have been measured at temperatures between 2 K and 110 K and in magnetic fields up to 1 T for various dopant concentrations. These systems have a high room-temperature resistivity (ρ > 160 µΩ cm) and become superconducting below 4 K. The increase of the room-temperature resistivity and its temperature coefficient with hydrogen dopant concentration is explained as due to an increase of disorder with hydrogen-doping. The temperature and magnetic field dependence of the resistivity has been analysed using theoretical models of weak-localisation and electron-electron interaction in disordered conductors. The hydrogen dopant is found to reduce the effective electron diffusion constant, D, the spin-orbit scattering rate, 1 so , τ − the superconducting transition temperature, T c , and broadens the superconducting transition region. The contribution of the Maki-Thompson interaction to the magnetoresistivity is also reduced
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Magnetic susceptibility of YBa2Cu3 O6+x crystals: Unusual Curie behavior and small contributions from charge density waves
© 2016 American Physical Society. We report measurements of the magnetic susceptibility of twinned single crystals of YBa2Cu3O6+x from just above their superconducting transition temperatures to 300 K with magnetic fields of up to 5 T applied parallel and perpendicular to the CuO2 planes at seven values of x. Appropriate analysis allows the relatively small, but still important, Curie terms to be separated from other contributions to the susceptibility. Our data support a picture in which the Curie terms arise from oxygen disorder in the Cu-O chains. This agrees with published work on polycrystalline samples where the sample cooling rate was varied, but here we show that the Curie plots flatten out above 200 K. We identify small effects of charge density wave (CDW) instabilities in the temperature (T) derivative of the in-plane susceptibility dχab(T)/dT and discuss their x dependence. For x=0.67 we make a detailed comparison with published high energy x-ray diffraction data using a minimal model involving Fermi arcs, thereby obtaining values for the CDW energy gap and the Helmholtz free energy in a coherence volume. At 80 and 100 K the latter is comparable with, or smaller than, kBT, respectively, highlighting the probable importance of thermal fluctuations. We note that the effect of the Lorentz force on charge carriers in the Fermi arcs could provide a simple mechanism for enhancing the CDWs in high magnetic fields, as suggested by recent experiments
Effect of vortex-core size on the flux lattice in a mesoscopic superconducting strip
We present an experimental study of the vortex-motion dissipation in a mesoscopic amorphous (a-)Nb0.7Ge0.3 strip, with emphasis on the results for 3-8 vortex rows parallel to the long strip axis. In the isothermal voltage vs magnetic field traces, at a constant current, we observe plateaus superimposed onto a monotonic background. The plateaus appear because finite vortex-core size influences the accommodation of the flux lattice into the strip. This conclusion is drawn from a quantitative analysis, which is free of adjustable parameters, of the magnetic fields that edge the plateaus
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The in- and out-of-plane magnetisation of highly underdoped YBa<inf>2</inf>Cu<inf>3</inf>O<inf>6+x</inf>single crystals
Abstract
Previously we have shown how measurements of static magnetic susceptibility χc(T) of YBa2Cu3O6+x single crystals for magnetic fields applied along the c-axis, and χab(T) for fields in the ab-plane, can give useful information about their thermodynamic properties which are still being hotly debated. SQUID magnetometry above the superconducting (s/c) transition temperature Tc is used for larger crystals, while piezolever torque magnetometry gives χc(T)-χab(T) for tiny crystals. Here we present new data for more heavily under-doped crystals with hole concentrations per CuO2 plane, p =0.058 to 0.073. We again find that the T-dependent anisotropy well above Tc arises from the pseudogap and the g-factor anisotropy, while at lower T there are Gaussian s/c fluctuations with a strong cut-off. This is possibly a different region where neutron scattering studies give evidence for competition between incommensurate magnetic short-range order and superconductivity. We have studied crystals with three values of x, measuring χc(T) and χab(T) immediately after fixing x by quenching on to a copper block and again after allowing sufficient time at room temperature for the Cu-O chains to order. Thus, we report data for three pairs of underdoped (UD) crystals with Tc ranging from 13 to 36 K, namely UD13 and UD20, UD15 and UD30, UD23 and UD36. As found previously for polycrystalline samples, ordering the Cu-O chains increases Tc and substantially reduces the Curie term. These are isotropic, in contrast to the Pauli-like susceptibility from the CuO2 planes where there is g factor anisotropy, and this allows us to make a powerful novel analysis. At higher T, χc(T)- χab(T) varies as a + bT where the bT term arises from the pseudogap. At lower T, deviations from this behaviour are analysed in terms of 2D or 3D Gaussian s/c fluctuations to obtain in-plane coherence lengths and upper critical fields as T→0.</jats:p
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Nernst effect of epitaxial YBCO films doped with Ca and Zn
We report Nernst effect data for crystalline films of Y0:95Ca0:05Ba2ðCu1 xZnxÞ3Oy (with x ¼ 0, 0.02,
and 0.04) and Y0:9Ca0:1Ba2Cu3Oy grown by pulsed laser deposition. We show that our own results and
published data for LSCO are consistent with the theory of Gaussian superconducting fluctuations. We also
show that Zn doping increases the Nernst coefficient simply because it reduces the in-plane conductivit
Nernst effect of epitaxial YBCO films doped with Ca and Zn
We report Nernst effect measurements for some crystalline films of Ca and
Zn-doped yttrium barium copper oxide grown by pulsed laser deposition. We argue
that our results and most of the published data for LSCO are consistent with
the theory of Gaussian superconducting fluctuations