2,299 research outputs found
Continuously operating 4He evaporation refrigerator
Journal ArticleA simple and compact device was developed to provide continuous, self-regulating refrigeration at approximately 1.3 K. The temperature of the device remains nearly constant, independent of external power, up to a critical power. For a molar flow rate of 10^-4 moles/sec, the refrigerator can absorb 4.5 mW. Such a refrigerator should be suitable for condensing 3He in a 3He-4He dilution refrigerator
Tuning Jeff = 1/2 Insulating State via Electron Doping and Pressure in Double-Layered Iridate Sr3Ir2O7
Sr3Ir2O7 exhibits a novel Jeff=1/2 insulating state that features a splitting
between Jeff=1/2 and 3/2 bands due to spin-orbit interaction. We report a
metal-insulator transition in Sr3Ir2O7 via either dilute electron doping (La3+
for Sr2+) or application of high pressure up to 35 GPa. Our study of
single-crystal Sr3Ir2O7 and (Sr1-xLax)3Ir2O7 reveals that application of high
hydrostatic pressure P leads to a drastic reduction in the electrical
resistivity by as much as six orders of magnitude at a critical pressure, PC =
13.2 GPa, manifesting a closing of the gap; but further increasing P up to 35
GPa produces no fully metallic state at low temperatures, possibly as a
consequence of localization due to a narrow distribution of bonding angles
{\theta}. In contrast, slight doping of La3+ ions for Sr2+ ions in Sr3Ir2O7
readily induces a robust metallic state in the resistivity at low temperatures;
the magnetic ordering temperature is significantly suppressed but remains
finite for (Sr0.95La0.05)3Ir2O7 where the metallic state occurs. The results
are discussed along with comparisons drawn with Sr2IrO4, a prototype of the
Jeff = 1/2 insulator.Comment: five figure
Non-Fermi-liquid behavior in nearly ferromagnetic metallic SrIrO3 single crystals
We report transport and thermodynamic properties of single-crystal SrIrO3 as
a function of temperature T and applied magnetic field H. We find that SrIrO3
is a non-Fermi-liquid metal near a ferromagnetic instability, as characterized
by the following properties: (1) small ordered moment but no evidence for
long-range order down to 1.7 K; (2) strongly enhanced magnetic susceptibility
that diverges as T or T1/2 at low temperatures, depending on the applied field;
(3) heat capacity C(T,H) ~ -Tlog T that is readily amplified by low applied
fields; (4) a strikingly large Wilson ratio at T< 4K; and (5) a T3/2-dependence
of electrical resistivity over the range 1.7 < T < 120 K. A phase diagram based
on the data implies SrIrO3 is a rare example of a stoichiometric oxide compound
that exhibits non-Fermi-liquid behavior near a quantum critical point (T = 0
and H = 0.23 T)
Observation of a pressure-induced transition from interlayer ferromagnetism to intralayer antiferromagnetism in Sr4Ru3O10
Sr4Ru3O10 is a Ruddlesden-Popper compound with triple Ru-O perovskite layers
separated by Sr-O alkali layers. This compound presents a rare coexistence of
interlayer (c-axis) ferromagnetism and intralayer (basal-plane) metamagnetism
at ambient pressure. Here we report the observation of pressure-induced,
intralayer itinerant antiferromagnetism arising from the interlayer
ferromagnetism. The application of modest hydrostatic pressure generates an
anisotropy that causes a flattening and a tilting of RuO6 octahedra. All
magnetic and transport results from this study indicate these lattice
distortions diminish the c-axis ferromagnetism and basal-plane metamagnetism,
and induce a basal-plane antiferromagnetic state. The unusually large
magnetoelastic coupling and pressure tunability of Sr4Ru3O10 makes it a unique
model system for studies of itinerant magnetism.Comment: 6 figure
Coexisting charge and magnetic orders in the dimer-chain iridate Ba5AlIr2O11
We have synthesized and studied single-crystal Ba5AlIr2O11 that features
dimer chains of two inequivalent octahedra occupied by tetravalent and
pentavalent ions, respectively. Ba5AlIr2O11 is a Mott insulator that undergoes
a subtle structural phase transition near 210 K and a magnetic transition at
4.5 K; the latter transition is surprisingly resistant to applied magnetic
fields up to 12 T, but sensitive to modest applied pressure. All results
indicate that the phase transition at 210 K signals an enhanced charge order
that induces electrical dipoles and strong dielectric response near 210 K. It
is clear that the strong covalency and spin-orbit interaction (SOI) suppress
double exchange in Ir dimers and stabilize a novel magnetic state. The behavior
of Ba5AlIr2O11 therefore provides unique insights into the physics of SOI along
with strong covalency in competition with double exchange interactions of
comparable strength.Comment: 6 figures, 20 pages. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1505.0087
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