246 research outputs found
On the destruction of the hidden order in URuSi by a strong magnetic field
We present a study of transport properties of the heavy fermion URuSi
in pulsed magnetic field. The large Nernst response of the hidden order state
is found to be suppressed when the magnetic field exceeds 35 T. The combination
of resistivity, Hall and Nernst data outlines the reconstruction of the Fermi
surface in the temperature-field phase diagram. The zero-field ground state is
a compensated heavy-electron semi-metal, which is destroyed by magnetic field
through a cascade of field-induced transitions. Above 40 T, URuSi
appears to be a polarized heavy fermions metal with a large density of carriers
whose effective mass rapidly decreases with increasing magnetic polarization.Comment: published versio
Heterogeneity in the Relationship between Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water and Cancer: A Systematic Review.
The epidemiological evidence demonstrating the effect of disinfection by-products (DBPs) from drinking water on colon and rectal cancers is well documented. However, no systematic assessment has been conducted to assess the potential effect measure modification (EMM) in the relationship between DBPs and cancer. The objective of this paper is to conduct a systematic literature review to determine the extent to which EMM has been assessed in the relationship between DBPs in drinking water in past epidemiological studies. Selected articles (n = 19) were reviewed, and effect estimates and covariates that could have been used in an EMM assessment were gathered. Approximately half of the studies assess EMM (n = 10), but the majority of studies only estimate it relative to sex subgroups (n = 6 for bladder cancer and n = 2 both for rectal and colon cancers). Although EMM is rarely assessed, several variables that could have a potential modification effect are routinely collected in these studies, such as socioeconomic status or age. The role of environmental exposures through drinking water can play an important role and contribute to cancer disparities. We encourage a systematic use of subgroup analysis to understand which populations or territories are more vulnerable to the health impacts of DBPs
Hybridization gap and anisotropic far-infrared optical conductivity of URu2Si2
We performed far-infrared optical spectroscopy measurements on the heavy
fermion compound URu 2 Si 2 as a function of temperature. The light's
electric-field was applied along the a-axis or the c-axis of the tetragonal
structure. We show that in addition to a pronounced anisotropy, the optical
conductivity exhibits for both axis a partial suppression of spectral weight
around 12 meV and below 30 K. We attribute these observations to a change in
the bandstructure below 30 K. However, since these changes have no noticeable
impact on the entropy nor on the DC transport properties, we suggest that this
is a crossover phenomenon rather than a thermodynamic phase transition.Comment: To be published in Physical Review
Fermi liquid behavior of the in-plane resistivity in the pseudogap state of YBa_2Cu_4O_8
Our knowledge of the ground state of underdoped hole-doped cuprates has
evolved considerably over the last few years. There is now compelling evidence
that inside the pseudogap phase, charge order breaks translational symmetry
leading to a reconstructed Fermi surface made of small pockets. Quantum
oscillations, [Doiron-Leyraud N, et al. (2007) Nature 447:564-568], optical
conductivity [Mirzaei SI, et al. (2013) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 110:5774-5778]
and the validity of Wiedemann-Franz law [Grissonnache G, et al. (2016) Phys.
Rev. B 93:064513] point to a Fermi liquid regime at low temperature in the
underdoped regime. However, the observation of a quadratic temperature
dependence in the electrical resistivity at low temperatures, the hallmark of a
Fermi liquid regime, is still missing. Here, we report magnetoresistance
measurements in the magnetic-field-induced normal state of underdoped
YBa_2Cu_4O_8 which are consistent with a T^2 resistivity extending down to 1.5
K. The magnitude of the T^2 coefficient, however, is much smaller than expected
for a single pocket of the mass and size observed in quantum oscillations,
implying that the reconstructed Fermi surface must consist of at least one
additional pocket.Comment: Main + SI : published versio
Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in YBa_2Cu_4O_8
We report the observation of Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in the underdoped
cuprate superconductor YBaCuO (Y124). For field aligned along the
c-axis, the frequency of the oscillations is T, which corresponds
to % of the total area of the first Brillouin zone. The effective
mass of the quasiparticles on this orbit is measured to be times
the free electron mass. Both the frequency and mass are comparable to those
recently observed for ortho-II YBaCuO (Y123-II). We show that
although small Fermi surface pockets may be expected from band structure
calculations in Y123-II, no such pockets are predicted for Y124. Our results
therefore imply that these small pockets are a generic feature of the copper
oxide plane in underdoped cuprates.Comment: v2: Version of paper accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letters. Only minor changes to the text and reference
Fermi-surface reconstruction and two-carrier model for the Hall effect in YBa2Cu4O8
Pulsed field measurements of the Hall resistivity and magnetoresistance of
underdoped YBa2Cu4O8 are analyzed self-consistently using a simple model based
on coexisting electron and hole carriers. The resultant mobilities and Hall
numbers are found to vary markedly with temperature. The conductivity of the
hole carriers drops by one order of magnitude below 30 K, explaining the
absence of quantum oscillations from these particular pockets. Meanwhile the
Hall coefficient of the electron carriers becomes strongly negative below 50 K.
The overall quality of the fits not only provides strong evidence for
Fermi-surface reconstruction in Y-based cuprates, it also strongly constrains
the type of reconstruction that might be occurring.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, updated after publication in Physical Review B
(Rapid Communication
Lifshitz critical point in the cuprate superconductor YBa2Cu3Oy from high-field Hall effect measurements
The Hall coefficient R_H of the cuprate superconductor YBa2Cu3Oy was measured
in magnetic fields up to 60 T for a hole concentration p from 0.078 to 0.152,
in the underdoped regime. In fields large enough to suppress superconductivity,
R_H(T) is seen to go from positive at high temperature to negative at low
temperature, for p > 0.08. This change of sign is attributed to the emergence
of an electron pocket in the Fermi surface at low temperature. At p < 0.08, the
normal-state R_H(T) remains positive at all temperatures, increasing
monotonically as T \to 0. We attribute the change of behaviour across p = 0.08
to a Lifshitz transition, namely a change in Fermi-surface topology occurring
at a critical concentration p_L = 0.08, where the electron pocket vanishes. The
loss of the high-mobility electron pocket across p_L coincides with a ten-fold
drop in the conductivity at low temperature, revealed in measurements of the
electrical resistivity at high fields, showing that the so-called
metal-insulator crossover of cuprates is in fact driven by a Lifshitz
transition. It also coincides with a jump in the in-plane anisotropy of ,
showing that without its electron pocket the Fermi surface must have strong
two-fold in-plane anisotropy. These findings are consistent with a
Fermi-surface reconstruction caused by a unidirectional spin-density wave or
stripe order.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, see associated Viewpoint: M. Vojta, Physics 4,
12 (2011
Skutterudite Results Shed Light on Heavy Fermion Physics
Only few selected examples among the great diversity of anomalous rare earth
skutterudite are reviewed. Focus is first given on PrFe4P12 in comparison with
URu2Si2. For PrFe4P12, great progress has been made on determining the nature
of the order parameter (OP). A non magnetic order parameter with a multipolar
component emerges here while for URu2Si2 the nature of the so-called hidden
order remains mysterious. The two systems have several similarities in their
temperature--pressure (T, P) and magnetic field--temperature (H, T) phase
diagrams, in their spin dynamics, in their nesting character and in their high
sensitivity to impurities. Advances on one side must stimulate new views on the
other. Besides general considerations on the choice of the OP, a simple basic
problem is the treatment of the Kondo coupling in a system with low charge
carrier number for the cases of uncompensated and compensated semi-metal. An
interesting problem is also the possible decoupling between exciton modes and
itinerant carriers.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, proceedings of International Conference on "New
Quantum Phenomena in Skutterudite and Related Systems
Multi-component magneto-optical conductivity of multilayer graphene on SiC
Far-infrared diagonal and Hall conductivities of multilayer epitaxial
graphene on the C-face of SiC were measured using magneto-optical absorption
and Faraday rotation in magnetic fields up to 7 T and temperatures between 5
and 300 K. Multiple components are identified in the spectra, which include:
(i) a quasi-classical cyclotron resonance (CR), originating from the highly
doped graphene layer closest to SiC, (ii) transitions between low-index Landau
levels (LLs), which stem from weakly doped layers and (iii) a broad optical
absorption background. Electron and hole type LL transitions are optically
distinguished and shown to coexist. An electron-hole asymmetry of the Fermi
velocity of about 2% was found within one graphene layer, while the Fermi
velocity varies by about 10% across the layers. The optical intensity of the LL
transitions is several times smaller than what is theoretically expected for
isolated graphene monolayers without electron-electron and electron-phonon
interactions.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
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