644 research outputs found
Isotope effect on the transition temperature in Fe-based superconductors: the current status
The results of the Fe isotope effect (Fe-IE) on the transition temperature
obtained up to date in various Fe-based high temperature superconductors
are summarized and reanalyzed by following the approach developed in [Phys.
Rev. B 82, 212505 (2010)]. It is demonstrated that the very controversial
results for Fe-IE on are caused by small structural changes occurring
simultaneously with the Fe isotope exchange. The Fe-IE exponent on
[, is the isotope mass]
needs to be decomposed into two components with the one related to the
structural changes () and the genuine (intrinsic)
one (). The validity of such decomposition is
further confirmed by the fact that coincides with
the Fe-IE exponent on the characteristic phonon frequencies as is reported in recent EXAFS and Raman experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. The paper is partially based on the results
published in [New J. Phys. 12, 073024 (2010) = arXiv:1002.2510] and [Phys.
Rev. B 82, 212505 (2010) = arXiv:1008.4540
Synthesis, crystal structure and chemical stability of the superconductor FeSe_{1-x}
We report on a comparative study of the crystal structure and the magnetic
properties of FeSe1-x (x= 0.00 - 0.15) superconducting samples by neutron
powder diffraction and magnetization measurements. The samples were synthesized
by two different methods: a 'low-temperature' one using powders as a starting
material at T =700 C and a "high-temperature' method using solid pieces of Fe
and Se at T= 1070 C. The effect of a starting (nominal) stoichiometry on the
phase purity of the obtained samples, the superconducting transition
temperature Tc, as well as the chemical instability of FeSe1-x at ambient
conditions were investigated. It was found that in the Fe-Se system a stable
phase exhibiting superconductivity at Tc~8K exists in a narrow range of
selenium concentration (FeSe0.974(2)).Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Iron isotope effect on the superconducting transition temperature and the crystal structure of FeSe_1-x
The Fe isotope effect (Fe-IE) on the transition temperature T_c and the
crystal structure was studied in the Fe chalcogenide superconductor FeSe_1-x by
means of magnetization and neutron powder diffraction (NPD). The substitution
of natural Fe (containing \simeq 92% of ^{56}Fe) by its lighter ^{54}Fe isotope
leads to a shift of T_c of 0.22(5)K corresponding to an Fe-IE exponent of
\alpha_Fe=0.81(15). Simultaneously, a small structural change with isotope
substitution is observed by NDP which may contribute to the total Fe isotope
shift of T_c.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Negative Oxygen Isotope Effect on the Static Spin Stripe Order in La_(2-x)Ba_xCuO_4 (x = 1/8)
Large negative oxygen-isotope (16O/18O) effects (OIE's) on the static
spin-stripe ordering temperature T_so and the magnetic volume fraction V_m were
observed in La_(2-x)Ba_xCuO_4 (x = 1/8) by means of muon spin rotation
experiments. The corresponding OIE exponents were found to be alpha_(T_so) =
-0.57(6) and alpha_(V_m) = -0.71(9), which are sign reversed to alpha_(T_c) =
0.46(6) measured for the superconducting transition temperature T_c. This
indicates that the electron-lattice interaction is involved in the stripe
formation and plays an important role in the competition between bulk
superconductivity and static stripe order in the cuprates.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Intrinsic and structural isotope effects in Fe-based superconductors
The currently available results of the isotope effect on the superconducting
transition temperature T_c in Fe-based high-temperature superconductors (HTS)
are highly controversial. The values of the Fe isotope effect (Fe-IE) exponent
\alpha_Fe for various families of Fe-based HTS were found to be as well
positive, as negative, or even be exceedingly larger than the BCS value
\alpha_BCS=0.5. Here we demonstrate that the Fe isotope substitution causes
small structural modifications which, in turn, affect T_c. Upon correcting the
isotope effect exponent for these structural effects, an almost unique value of
\alpha~0.35-0.4 is observed for at least three different families of Fe-based
HTS.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Muon-spin rotation measurements of the penetration depth of the Mo_3Sb_7 superconductor
Measurements of the magnetic field penetration depth \lambda in
superconductor Mo_3Sb_7 (T_c~2.1 K) were carried out by means of
muon-spin-rotation. The absolute values of \lambda, the Ginzburg-Landau
parameter \kappa, the first H_{c1} and the second H_{c2} critical fields at T=0
are \lambda(0)=720(100)nm, \kappa(0)=55(9), \mu_0H_{c1}(0)=1.8(3)mT, and
\mu_0H_{c2}(0)=1.9(2)T. The zero temperature value of the superconducting
energy gap \Delta(0) was found to be 0.35(1)meV corresponding to the ratio
2\Delta(0)/k_BT_c=3.83(10). At low temperatures \lambda^{-2}(T) saturates and
becomes constant below T~0.3T_c, in agreement with what is expected for s-wave
BCS superconductors. Our results suggest that Mo_3Sb_7 is a BCS superconductor
with the isotropic energy gapComment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Pressure Induced Static Magnetic Order in Superconducting FeSe_1-x
We report on a detailed investigation of the electronic phase diagram of
FeSe_1-x under pressures up to 1.4GPa by means of AC magnetization and
muon-spin rotation. At a pressure \simeq0.8GPa the non-magnetic and
superconducting FeSe_1-x enters a region where long range static magnetic order
is realized above T_c and bulk superconductivity coexists and competes on short
length scales with the magnetic order below T_c. For even higher pressures an
enhancement of both the magnetic and the superconducting transition
temperatures as well as of the corresponding order parameters is observed.
These exceptional properties make FeSe1-x to be one of the most interesting
superconducting systems investigated extensively at present.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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