328 research outputs found
Review of the CFC/ICCO/Bioversity project on cacao germplasm evaluation (1998-2010)
The CFC/ICCO/Bioversity project was in response to an urgent need to revitalize cacao breeding and research globally for increasing resistance to pests and disease. It aimed to strengthen national cacao improvement programmes and increase international collaboration by carrying out joint evaluation, selection and breeding activities in ten cocoa-producing countries. The project implemented in two phases â Phase I (1998- 2004) and Phase II (2004-2010), has been one of the most ambitious collaborative efforts in cacao breeding. With an understanding that a similar global collaboration is needed to tackle the impacts of climate change on cacao production, this review was developed in response to a request from the cocoa industry and research partners to evaluate the effectiveness of the project, identify key lessons learned for the implementation of new multisite evaluation field trials focused on increasing the resilience of cacao to the effects of climate change. The cacao research community will be able to use these lessons learned to be better prepared for, and more effective in, the execution of future collaborative research initiatives
Fermi-surface transformation across the pseudogap critical point of the cuprate superconductor LaNdSrCuO
The electrical resistivity and Hall coefficient R of the
tetragonal single-layer cuprate Nd-LSCO were measured in magnetic fields up to
T, large enough to access the normal state at , for closely
spaced dopings across the pseudogap critical point at .
Below , both coefficients exhibit an upturn at low temperature, which
gets more pronounced with decreasing . Taken together, these upturns show
that the normal-state carrier density at drops upon entering the
pseudogap phase. Quantitatively, it goes from at to at . By contrast, the mobility does not change appreciably, as
revealed by the magneto-resistance. The transition has a width in doping and
some internal structure, whereby R responds more slowly than to the
opening of the pseudogap. We attribute this difference to a Fermi surface that
supports both hole-like and electron-like carriers in the interval , with compensating contributions to R. Our data are in excellent
agreement with recent high-field data on YBCO and LSCO. The quantitative
consistency across three different cuprates shows that a drop in carrier
density from to is a universal signature of the pseudogap
transition at . We discuss the implication of these findings for the
nature of the pseudogap phase.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure
Hall, Seebeck, and Nernst Coefficients of Underdoped HgBa2CuO4+d: Fermi-Surface Reconstruction in an Archetypal Cuprate Superconductor
Charge density-wave order has been observed in cuprate superconductors whose
crystal structure breaks the square symmetry of the CuO2 planes, such as
orthorhombic YBa2Cu3Oy (YBCO), but not so far in cuprates that preserve that
symmetry, such as tetragonal HgBa2CuO4+d (Hg1201). We have measured the Hall
(R_H), Seebeck (S), and Nernst coefficients of underdoped Hg1201 in magnetic
fields large enough to suppress superconductivity. The high-field R_H(T) and
S(T) are found to drop with decreasing temperature and become negative, as also
observed in YBCO at comparable doping. In YBCO, the negative R_H and S are
signatures of a small electron pocket caused by Fermi-surface reconstruction,
attributed to charge density-wave modulations observed in the same range of
doping and temperature. We deduce that a similar Fermi-surface reconstruction
takes place in Hg1201, evidence that density-wave order exists in this
material. A striking similarity is also found in the normal-state Nernst
coefficient, further supporting this interpretation. Given the model nature of
Hg1201, Fermi-surface reconstruction appears to be common to all hole-doped
cuprates, suggesting that density-wave order is a fundamental property of these
materials
Evidence for a small hole pocket in the Fermi surface of underdoped YBa2Cu3Oy
The Fermi surface of a metal is the fundamental basis from which its
properties can be understood. In underdoped cuprate superconductors, the Fermi
surface undergoes a reconstruction that produces a small electron pocket, but
whether there is another, as yet undetected portion to the Fermi surface is
unknown. Establishing the complete topology of the Fermi surface is key to
identifying the mechanism responsible for its reconstruction. Here we report
the discovery of a second Fermi pocket in underdoped YBa2Cu3Oy, detected as a
small quantum oscillation frequency in the thermoelectric response and in the
c-axis resistance. The field-angle dependence of the frequency demonstrates
that it is a distinct Fermi surface and the normal-state thermopower requires
it to be a hole pocket. A Fermi surface consisting of one electron pocket and
two hole pockets with the measured areas and masses is consistent with a
Fermi-surface reconstruction caused by the charge-density-wave order observed
in YBa2Cu3Oy, provided other parts of the reconstructed Fermi surface are
removed by a separate mechanism, possibly the pseudogap.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figure
Isotropic three-dimensional gap in the iron-arsenide superconductor LiFeAs from directional heat transport measurements
The thermal conductivity k of the iron-arsenide superconductor LiFeAs (Tc ~
18K) was measured in single crystals at temperatures down to T~50mK and in
magnetic fields up to H=17T, very close to the upper critical field Hc2~18T.
For both directions of the heat current, parallel and perpendicular to the
tetragonal c-axis, a negligible residual linear term k/T is found as T ->0,
revealing that there are no zero-energy quasiparticles in the superconducting
state. The increase in k with magnetic field is the same for both current
directions and it follows closely the dependence expected for an isotropic
superconducting gap. There is no evidence of multi-band character, whereby the
gap would be different on different Fermi-surface sheets. These findings show
that the superconducting gap in LiFeAs is isotropic in 3D, without nodes or
deep minima anywhere on the Fermi surface. Comparison with other iron-pnictide
superconductors suggests that a nodeless isotropic gap is a common feature at
optimal doping (maximal Tc).Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Chemical potential oscillations from a single nodal pocket in the underdoped high-Tc superconductor YBa2Cu3O6+x
The mystery of the normal state in the underdoped cuprates has deepened with
the use of newer and complementary experimental probes. While photoemission
studies have revealed solely `Fermi arcs' centered on nodal points in the
Brillouin zone at which holes aggregate upon doping, more recent quantum
oscillation experiments have been interpreted in terms of an ambipolar Fermi
surface, that includes sections containing electron carriers located at the
antinodal region. To address the question of whether an ambipolar Fermi surface
truly exists, here we utilize measurements of the second harmonic quantum
oscillations, which reveal that the amplitude of these oscillations arises
mainly from oscillations in the chemical potential, providing crucial
information on the nature of the Fermi surface in underdoped YBa2Cu3O6+x. In
particular, the detailed relationship between the second harmonic amplitude and
the fundamental amplitude of the quantum oscillations leads us to the
conclusion that there exists only a single underlying quasi-two dimensional
Fermi surface pocket giving rise to the multiple frequency components observed
via the effects of warping, bilayer splitting and magnetic breakdown. A range
of studies suggest that the pocket is most likely associated with states near
the nodal region of the Brillouin zone of underdoped YBa2Cu3O6+x at high
magnetic fields.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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