6 research outputs found

    Wide critical fluctuations of the field-induced phase transition in graphite

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    S.M on requestInternational audienceIn the immediate vicinity of the critical temperature (Tc_c) of a phase transition, there are fluctuations of the order parameter, which reside beyond the mean-field approximation. Such critical fluctuations usually occur in a very narrow temperature window in contrast to Gaussian fluctuations. Here, we report on a study of specific heat in graphite subject to high magnetic field when all carriers are confined in the lowest Landau levels. The observation of a BCS-like specific heat jump in both temperature and field sweeps establishes that the phase transition discovered decades ago in graphite is of the second-order. The jump is preceded by a steady field-induced enhancement of the electronic specific heat. A modest (20 percent) reduction in the amplitude of the magnetic field (from 33 T to 27 T) leads to a threefold decrease of Tc_c and a drastic widening of the specific heat anomaly, which acquires a tail spreading to two times Tc_c. We argue that the steady departure from the mean-field BCS behavior is the consequence of an exceptionally large Ginzburg number in this dilute metal, which grows steadily as the field lowers. Our fit of the critical fluctuations indicates that they belong to the 3DXY3DXY universality class, similar to the case of 4^4He superfluid transition

    Defect-induced weak collective pinning in superconducting YB6 crystals

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    In a previous study (2017 Phys. Rev. B 96 144501), a strong variation in the superconducting transition temperature T _c of YB _6 differing by a factor of two has been explained by a change in the density of yttrium and boron vacancies tuning the electron–phonon interaction. Here, by using an array of miniature Hall probes, we address the penetration of the magnetic field, pinning, and critical current density on a series of YB _6 single crystals with T _c variation between 4.25 and 7.35 K. The analysis of the superconducting and normal-state specific heat characteristics allowed us to determine T _c and the stoichiometry of our samples. We observed almost no pinning in the most stoichiometric YB _6 crystal with the lowest T _c . Upon increasing the number of vacancies weak pinning appears, and the critical current density is enhanced following the increased transition temperature in a linear variation. We argue that such an increase is, within weak collective pinning theory, consistent with the increasing number of vacancies that serve as pinning centers

    Yu-Shiba-Rusinov bands in ferromagnetic superconducting diamond

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    The combination of different exotic properties in materials paves the way for the emergence of their new potential applications. An example is the recently found coexistence of the mutually antagonistic ferromagnetism and superconductivity in hydrogenated boron-doped diamond, which promises to be an attractive system with which to explore unconventional physics. Here, we show the emergence of Yu-Shiba-Rusinov (YSR) bands with a spatial extent of tens of nanometers in ferromagnetic superconducting diamond using scanning tunneling spectroscopy. We demonstrate theoretically how a two-dimensional (2D) spin lattice at the surface of a three-dimensional (3D) superconductor gives rise to the YSR bands and how their density-of-states profile correlates with the spin lattice structure. The established strategy to realize new forms of the coexistence of ferromagnetism and superconductivity opens a way to engineer the unusual electronic states and also to design better-performing superconducting devices

    Yu-Shiba-Rusinov bands in ferromagnetic superconducting diamond

    No full text
    The combination of different exotic properties in materials paves the way for the emergence of their new potential applications. An example is the recently found coexistence of the mutually antagonistic ferromagnetism and superconductivity in hydrogenated boron-doped diamond, which promises to be an attractive system with which to explore unconventional physics. Here, we show the emergence of Yu-Shiba-Rusinov (YSR) bands with a spatial extent of tens of nanometers in ferromagnetic superconducting diamond using scanning tunneling spectroscopy. We demonstrate theoretically how a two-dimensional (2D) spin lattice at the surface of a three-dimensional (3D) superconductor gives rise to the YSR bands and how their density-of-states profile correlates with the spin lattice structure. The established strategy to realize new forms of the coexistence of ferromagnetism and superconductivity opens a way to engineer the unusual electronic states and also to design better-performing superconducting devices
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