201 research outputs found
Specific heat of aluminium-doped superconducting silicon carbide
The discoveries of superconductivity in heavily boron-doped diamond, silicon
and silicon carbide renewed the interest in the ground states of charge-carrier
doped wide-gap semiconductors. Recently, aluminium doping in silicon carbide
successfully yielded a metallic phase from which at high aluminium
concentrations superconductivity emerges. Here, we present a specific-heat
study on superconducting aluminium-doped silicon carbide. We observe a clear
jump anomaly at the superconducting transition temperature 1.5 K indicating
that aluminium-doped silicon carbide is a bulk superconductor. An analysis of
the jump anomaly suggests BCS-like phonon-mediated superconductivity in this
system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Evidence for Multiple Phase Transitions in La_1-xCa_xCoO_3
We report thermal-expansion and specific-heat data of the series
La_1-xCa_xCoO_3 for 0 <= x <= 0.3. For x = 0 the thermal-expansion coefficient
alpha(T) features a pronounced maximum around T = 50 K caused by a
temperature-dependent spin-state transition from a low-spin state (S=0) at low
temperatures towards a higher spin state of the Co^3+ ions. The partial
substitution of the La^3+ ions by divalent Ca^2+ ions causes drastic changes in
the macroscopic properties of LaCoO_3. Around x ~ 0.125 the large maximum in
alpha(T) has completely vanished. With further increasing x three different
anomalies develop
Bulk superconducting phase with a full energy gap in the doped topological insulator Cu_xBi_2Se_3
The superconductivity recently found in the doped topological insulator
Cu_xBi_2Se_3 offers a great opportunity to search for a topological
superconductor. We have successfully prepared a single-crystal sample with a
large shielding fraction and measured the specific-heat anomaly associated with
the superconductivity. The temperature dependence of the specific heat suggests
a fully-gapped, strong-coupling superconducting state, but the BCS theory is
not in full agreement with the data, which hints at a possible unconventional
pairing in Cu_xBi_2Se_3. Also, the evaluated effective mass of 2.6m_e (m_e is
the free electron mass) points to a large mass enhancement in this material.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Superconductivity in heavily boron-doped silicon carbide
The discoveries of superconductivity in heavily boron-doped diamond (C:B) in
2004 and silicon (Si:B) in 2006 renew the interest in the superconducting state
of semiconductors. Charge-carrier doping of wide-gap semiconductors leads to a
metallic phase from which upon further doping superconductivity can emerge.
Recently, we discovered superconductivity in a closely related system:
heavily-boron doped silicon carbide (SiC:B). The sample used for that study
consists of cubic and hexagonal SiC phase fractions and hence this lead to the
question which of them participates in the superconductivity. Here we focus on
a sample which mainly consists of hexagonal SiC without any indication for the
cubic modification by means of x-ray diffraction, resistivity, and ac
susceptibility.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Direct Measurement of the Out-of-Plane Spin Texture in the Dirac Cone Surface State of a Topological Insulator
We have performed spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy of
Bi2Te3 and present the first direct evidence for the existence of the
out-of-plane spin component on the surface state of a topological insulator. We
found that the magnitude of the out-of-plane spin polarization on a hexagonally
deformed Fermi surface (FS) of Bi2Te3 reaches maximally 25% of the in-plane
counterpart while such a sizable out-of-plane spin component does not exist in
the more circular FS of TlBiSe2, indicating that the hexagonal deformation of
the FS is responsible for the deviation from the ideal helical spin texture.
The observed out-of-plane polarization is much smaller than that expected from
existing theory, suggesting that an additional ingredient is necessary for
correctly understanding the surface spin polarization in Bi2Te3.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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