6,854 research outputs found

    Pressure Effect on the superconducting properties of LaO_{1-x}F_{x}FeAs(x=0.11) superconductor

    Full text link
    Diamagnetic susceptibility measurements under high hydrostatic pressure (up to 1.03 GPa) were carried out on the newly discovered Fe-based superconductor LaO_{1-x}F_{x}FeAs(x=0.11). The transition temperature T_c, defined as the point at the maximum slope of superconducting transition, was enhanced almost linearly by hydrostatic pressure, yielding a dT_c/dP of about 1.2 K/GPa. Differential diamagnetic susceptibility curves indicate that the underlying superconducting state is complicated. It is suggested that pressure plays an important role on pushing low T_c superconducting phase toward the main (optimal) superconducting phase.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    The activation energy determination in non-isothermal conditions for the solid-state phase transformation of 1035 steel

    Get PDF
    The activation energy of solid-state phase transformation for the steel has been evaluated by the isoconversional method. It is demonstrated that the linear fitting is a mathematically invalid procedure that generally invalidates the isoconversional method. As an alternative, we apply the advanced isoconversional method that can be used to determine the activation energy of solid-state phase transformation of 1035 steel. The activation energy determined by this method varies with the transformed phase fraction. The variation of the activation energy was interpreted by the nucleation and growth model. It is shown that the advanced isoconversional method can be recommended as a trustworthy way of determining the activation energy of solid-state phase transformation of 1035 steel

    Excited-state optically detected magnetic resonance of spin defects in hexagonal boron nitride

    Full text link
    Negatively charged boron vacancy (VB-) centers in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) are promising spin defects in a van der Waals crystal. Understanding the spin properties of the excited state (ES) is critical for realizing dynamic nuclear polarization. Here, we report zero-field splitting in the ES of DES = 2160 MHz and an optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) contrast of 12% at cryogenic temperature. The ES has a g-factor similar to the ground state. The ES photodynamics is further elucidated by measuring the level anti-crossing of the VB- defects under varying external magnetic fields. In contrast to nitrogen vacancy (NV-) centers in diamond, the emission change caused by excited-state level anti-crossing (ESLAC) is more prominent at cryo-temperature than at room temperature. Our results provide important information for utilizing the spin defects of hBN in quantum technology

    Off the Beaten Path: Let's Replace Term-Based Retrieval with k-NN Search

    Full text link
    Retrieval pipelines commonly rely on a term-based search to obtain candidate records, which are subsequently re-ranked. Some candidates are missed by this approach, e.g., due to a vocabulary mismatch. We address this issue by replacing the term-based search with a generic k-NN retrieval algorithm, where a similarity function can take into account subtle term associations. While an exact brute-force k-NN search using this similarity function is slow, we demonstrate that an approximate algorithm can be nearly two orders of magnitude faster at the expense of only a small loss in accuracy. A retrieval pipeline using an approximate k-NN search can be more effective and efficient than the term-based pipeline. This opens up new possibilities for designing effective retrieval pipelines. Our software (including data-generating code) and derivative data based on the Stack Overflow collection is available online

    Angular dependence of resistivity in the superconducting state of NdFeAsO0.82_{0.82}F0.18_{0.18} single crystals

    Full text link
    We report the results of angle dependent resistivity of NdFeAsO0.82_{0.82}F0.18_{0.18} single crystals in the superconducting state. By doing the scaling of resistivity within the frame of the anisotropic Ginzburg-Landau theory, it is found that the angle dependent resistivity measured under different magnetic fields at a certain temperature can be collapsed onto one curve. As a scaling parameter, the anisotropy Γ\Gamma can be determined for different temperatures. It is found that Γ(T)\Gamma(T) increases slowly with decreasing temperature, varying from Γ\Gamma \simeq 5.48 at T=50 K to Γ\Gamma \simeq 6.24 at T=44 K. This temperature dependence can be understood within the picture of multi-band superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Single vortex structure in two models of iron pnictide s±s^\pm superconductivity

    Full text link
    The structure of a single vortex in a FeAs superconductor is studied in the framework of two formulations of superconductivity for the recently proposed sign-reversed ss wave (s±s^\pm) scenario: {\it (i)} a continuum model taking into account the existence of an electron and a hole band with a repulsive local interaction between the two; {\it (ii)} a lattice tight-binding model with two orbitals per unit cell and a next-nearest-neighbour attractive interaction. In the first model, the local density of states (LDOS) at the vortex centre, as a function of energy, exhibits a peak at the Fermi level, while in the second model such LDOS peak is deviated from the Fermi level and its energy depends on band filling. An impurity located outside the vortex core has little effect on the LDOS peak, but an impurity close to the vortex core can almost suppress it and modify its position.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in New Journal of Physic
    corecore