441 research outputs found
Superconductivity and magnetism in platinum-substituted SrFe2As2 single crystals
Single crystals of SrFe2-xPtxAs2 (0 < x < 0.36) were grown using the self
flux solution method and characterized using x-ray crystallography, electrical
transport, magnetic susceptibility, and specific heat measurements. The
magnetic/structural transition is suppressed with increasing Pt concentration,
with superconductivity seen over the range 0.08 < x < 0.36 with a maximum
transition temperature Tc of 16 K at x = 0.16. The shape of the phase diagram
and the changes to the lattice parameters are similar to the effects of other
group VIII elements Ni and Pd, however the higher transition temperature and
extended range of superconductivity suggest some complexity beyond the simple
electron counting picture that has been discussed thus far.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Hybridization, Inter-Ion Correlation, and Surface States in the Kondo Insulator SmB6
As an exemplary Kondo insulator, SmB6 has been studied for several decades;
however, direct evidence for the development of the Kondo coherent state and
the evolution of the electronic structure in the material has not been obtained
due to the rather complicated electronic and thermal transport behavior.
Recently, these open questions attracted increasing attention as the emergence
of a time-reversal invariant topological surface state in the Kondo insulator
has been suggested. Here, we use point-contact spectroscopy to reveal the
temperature dependence of the electronic states in SmB6. We demonstrate that
SmB6 is a model Kondo insulator: below 100 K, the conductance spectra reflect
the Kondo hybridization of Sm ions, but below ~ 30 K, signatures of inter-ion
correlation effects clearly emerge. Moreover, we find evidence that the
low-temperature insulating state of this exemplary Kondo lattice compound
harbors conduction states on the surface, in support of predictions of
nontrivial topology in Kondo insulators.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review
The suppression of magnetism and the development of superconductivity within the collapsed tetragonal phase of Ca0.67Sr0.33Fe2As2 at high pressure
Structural and electronic characterization of (Ca0.67Sr0.33)Fe2As2 has been
performed as a func- tion of pressure up to 12 GPa using conventional and
designer diamond anvil cells. The compound (Ca0.67Sr0.33)Fe2As2 behaves
intermediate between its end members-CaFe2As2 and SrFe2As2- displaying a
suppression of magnetism and the onset of superconductivity. Like other members
of the AEFe2As2 family, (Ca0.67Sr0.33)Fe2As2 undergoes a pressure-induced
isostructural volume collapse, which we associate with the development of As-As
bonding across the mirror plane of the structure. This collapsed tetragonal
phase abruptly cuts off the magnetic state, giving rise to superconductivity
with a maximum Tc=22.2 K. The maximum Tc of the superconducting phase is not
strongly correlated with any structural parameter, but its proximity to the
abrupt suppression of magnetism as well as the volume collapse transition
suggests that magnetic interactions and structural inhomogeneity may play a
role in its development. The pressure-dependent evolution of the ordered states
and crystal structures in (Ca,Sr)Fe2As2 provides an avenue to understand the
generic behavior of the other members of the AEFe2As2 family.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Universal pair-breaking in transition metal-substituted iron-pnictide superconductors
The experimental transport scattering rate was determined for a wide range of
optimally doped transition metal-substituted FeAs-based compounds with the
ThCr2Si2 (122) crystal structure. The maximum transition temperature Tc for
several Ba-, Sr-, and Ca-based 122 systems follows a universal rate of
suppression with increasing scattering rate indicative of a common
pair-breaking mechanism. Extraction of standard pair-breaking parameters puts a
limit of \sim26 K on the maximum Tc for all transition metal-substituted 122
systems, in agreement with experimental observations, and sets a critical
scattering rate of 1.5x10^14 s^-1 for the suppression of the superconducting
phase. The observed critical scattering rate is much weaker than that expected
for a sign-changing order parameter, providing important constraints on the
nature of the superconducting gap in the 122 family of iron-based
superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Spatially resolved femtosecond pump-probe study of topological insulator Bi2Se3
Carrier and phonon dynamics in Bi2Se3 crystals are studied by a spatially
resolved ultrafast pump-probe technique. Pronounced oscillations in
differential reflection are observed with two distinct frequencies, and are
attributed to coherent optical and acoustic phonons, respectively. The rising
time of the signal indicates that the thermalization and energy relaxation of
hot carriers are both sub-ps in this material. We found that the thermalization
and relaxation time decreases with the carrier density. The expansion of the
differential reflection profile allows us to estimate an ambipolar carrier
diffusion coefficient on the order of 500 square centimeters per second. A
long-term slow expansion of the profile shows a thermal diffusion coefficient
of 1.2 square centimeters per second.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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