361 research outputs found
Theory of Thermal Conductivity in High-Tc Superconductors below Tc: Comparison between Hole-Doped and Electron-Doped Systems
In hole-doped high-Tc superconductors, thermal conductivity increases
drastically just below Tc, which has been considered as a hallmark of a nodal
gap. In contrast, such a coherence peak in thermal conductivity is not visible
in electron-doped compounds, which may indicate a full-gap state such as a
(d+is)-wave state. To settle this problem, we study the thermal conductivity in
the Hubbard model using the fluctuation-exchange (FLEX) approximation, which
predicts that the nodal d-wave state is realized in both hole-doped and
electron-doped compounds. The contrasting behavior of thermal conductivity in
both compounds originates from the differences in the hot/cold spot structure.
In general, a prominent coherence peak in thermal conductivity appears in
line-node superconductors only when the cold spot exists on the nodal line.Comment: 5 pages, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. Vol.76 No.
Theory of Anomalous Hall Effect in a Heavy fermion System with a Strong Anisotropic Crystal Field
In a heavy fermion system, there exists the anomalous Hall effect caused by
localized -orbital freedom, in addition to the normal Hall effect due to the
Lorentz force. In 1994, we found that the Hall coefficient caused by the
anomalous Hall effect () is predominant and the relation ( is the electrical resistivity) holds at low
temperatures in many compounds. In this work, we study the system where the
magnetic susceptibility is highly anisotropic due to the strong crystalline
electric field on -orbitals. Interestingly, we find that is
nearly isotropic in general. This tendency is frequently observed
experimentally, which has casted suspicion that the anomalous Hall effect may
be irrelevant in real materials. Our theory corresponds to corrections and
generalizations of the pioneering work on ferromagnetic metals by Karplus and
Luttinger.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. (No.8
Optical Conductivity and Hall Coefficient in High-Tc Superconductors: Significant Role of Current Vertex Corrections
We study AC conductivities in high-Tc cuprates, which offer us significant
information to reveal the true electronic ground states. Based on the
fluctuation-exchange (FLEX) approximation, current vertex corrections (CVC's)
are correctly taken into account to satisfy the conservation laws. We find the
significant role of the CVC's on the optical Hall conductivity in the presence
of strong antiferromagnetic (AF) fluctuations. This fact leads to the failure
of the relaxation time approximation (RTA). As a result, experimental highly
unusual behaviors, (i) prominent frequency and temperature dependences of the
optical Hall coefficient, and (ii) simple Drude form of the optical Hall andge
for wide range of frequencies, are satisfactorily reproduced. In conclusion,
both DC and AC transport phenomena in (slightly under-doped) high-Tc cuprates
can be explained comprehensively in terms of nearly AF Fermi liquid, if one
take the CVC's into account.Comment: 5 page
Indication of intrinsic spin Hall effect in 4d and 5d transition metals
We have investigated spin Hall effects in 4 and 5 transition metals,
Nb, Ta, Mo, Pd and Pt, by incorporating the spin absorption method in the
lateral spin valve structure; where large spin current preferably relaxes into
the transition metals, exhibiting strong spin-orbit interactions. Thereby
nonlocal spin valve measurements enable us to evaluate their spin Hall
conductivities. The sign of the spin Hall conductivity changes systematically
depending on the number of electrons. This tendency is in good agreement
with the recent theoretical calculation based on the intrinsic spin Hall
effect.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Giant Extrinsic Spin Hall Effect due to Rare-Earth Impurities
We investigate the extrinsic spin Hall effect in the electron gas model due
to magnetic impurities, by focusing on Ce- and Yb-impurities. In the dilute
limit, the skew scattering term dominates the side jump term. For
Ce-impurities, the spin Hall angle due to skew scattering is
given by , where is the phase shift
for partial wave. Since reaches if
\delta_2 \simge 0.03, the spin Hall effect is anticipated to be considerable
in metals with rare-earth impurities. The giant extrinsic SHE originates from
the large orbital angular momentum, which is also significant for the intrinsic
SHE.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to be published in New Journal of Physic
Detection of antiferromagnetic ordering in heavily doped LaFeAsO1-xHx pnictide superconductors using nuclear-magnetic-resonance techniques
We studied double superconducting (SC) domes in LaFeAsO1-xHx by using 75As-
and 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance techniques, and unexpectedly discovered that
a new antiferromagnetic (AF) phase follows the double SC domes on further H
doping, forming a symmetric alignment of AF and SC phases in the electronic
phase diagram. We demonstrated that the new AF ordering originates from the
nesting between electron pockets, unlike the nesting between electron and hole
pockets as seen in the majority of undoped pnictides. The new AF ordering is
derived from the features common to high-Tc pnictides: however, it has not been
reported so far for other high-Tc pnictides because of their poor electron
doping capability.Comment: 5 figures, in press in PR
Quantum critical behavior in heavily doped LaFeAsOH pnictide superconductors analyzed using nuclear magnetic resonance
We studied the quantum critical behavior of the second antiferromagnetic (AF)
phase in the heavily electron-doped high- pnictide, LaFeAsOH
by using As and H nuclear-magnetic-resonance (NMR) technique. In
the second AF phase, we observed a spatially modulated spin-density-wave-like
state up to =0.6 from the NMR spectral lineshape and detected a low-energy
excitation gap from the nuclear relaxation time of As. The
excitation gap closes at the AF quantum critical point (QCP) at . The superconducting (SC) phase in a lower-doping regime contacts the
second AF phase only at the AF QCP, and both phases are segregated from each
other. The absence of AF critical fluctuations and the enhancement of the
in-plane electric anisotropy are key factors for the development of
superconductivity.Comment: accepted in Phys. Rev.
- …