476 research outputs found

    Superconductivity and magnetism in platinum-substituted SrFe2As2 single crystals

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    Single crystals of SrFe2-xPtxAs2 (0 < x < 0.36) were grown using the self flux solution method and characterized using x-ray crystallography, electrical transport, magnetic susceptibility, and specific heat measurements. The magnetic/structural transition is suppressed with increasing Pt concentration, with superconductivity seen over the range 0.08 < x < 0.36 with a maximum transition temperature Tc of 16 K at x = 0.16. The shape of the phase diagram and the changes to the lattice parameters are similar to the effects of other group VIII elements Ni and Pd, however the higher transition temperature and extended range of superconductivity suggest some complexity beyond the simple electron counting picture that has been discussed thus far.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure

    Towards spin injection from silicon into topological insulators: Schottky barrier between Si and Bi2Se3

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    A scheme is proposed to electrically measure the spin-momentum coupling in the topological insulator surface state by injection of spin polarized electrons from silicon. As a first approach, devices were fabricated consisting of thin (<100nm) exfoliated crystals of Bi2Se3 on n-type silicon with independent electrical contacts to silicon and Bi2Se3. Analysis of the temperature dependence of thermionic emission in reverse bias indicates a barrier height of 0.34 eV at the Si-Bi2Se3 interface. This robust Schottky barrier opens the possibility of novel device designs based on sub-band gap internal photoemission from Bi2Se3 into Si

    Strong electron-boson coupling in the iron-based superconductor BaFe1.9Pt0.1As2 revealed by infrared spectroscopy

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    Understanding the formation of Cooper pairs in iron-based superconductors is one of the most important topics in condensed matter physics. In conventional superconductors, the electron-phonon interaction leads to the formation of Cooper pairs. In conventional strong-coupling superconductors like lead (Pb), the features due to electron-phonon interaction are evident in the infrared absorption spectra. Here we investigate the infrared absorption spectra of the iron arsenide superconductor BaFe1.9Pt0.1As2. We find that this superconductor has fully gapped (nodeless) Fermi surfaces, and we observe the strong-coupling electron-boson interaction features in the infrared absorption spectra. Through modeling with the Eliashberg function based on Eliashberg theory, we obtain a good quantitative description of the energy gaps and the strong-coupling features. The full Eliashberg equations are solved to check the self-consistency of the electron-boson coupling spectrum, the largest energy gap, and the transition temperature (Tc). Our experimental data and analysis provide compelling evidence that superconductivity in BaFe1.9Pt0.1As2 is induced by the coupling of electrons to a low-energy bosonic mode that does not originate solely from phonons.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figute

    Fast method for the determination of short-chain-length polyhydroxyalkanoates (scl-PHAs) in bacterial samples by In Vial-Thermolysis (IVT)

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    none8siA new method based on the GC–MS analysis of thermolysis products obtained by treating bacterial samples at a high temperature (above 270 C) has been developed. This method, here named “In-Vial- Thermolysis” (IVT), allowed for the simultaneous determination of short-chain-length polyhydrox- yalkanoates (scl-PHA) content and composition. The method was applied to both single strains and microbial mixed cultures (MMC) fed with different carbon sources. The IVT procedure provided similar analytical performances compared to previous Py-GC–MS and Py- GC-FID methods, suggesting a similar application for PHA quantitation in bacterial cells. Results from the IVT procedure and the traditional methanolysis method were compared; the correlation between the two datasets was fit for the purpose, giving a R2 of 0.975. In search of further simplification, the rationale of IVT was exploited for the development of a “field method” based on the titration of thermolyzed samples with sodium hydrogen carbonate to quantify PHA inside bacterial cells. The accuracy of the IVT method was fit for the purpose. These results lead to the possibility for the on-line measurement of PHA productivity. Moreover, they allow for the fast and inexpensive quantification/characterization of PHA for biotechnological process control, as well as investigation over various bacterial communities and/or feeding strategies.mixedF. Abbondanzi; G. Biscaro; G. Carvalho; L. Favaro; P. Lemos; M. Paglione; C. Samorì; C. TorriF. Abbondanzi; G. Biscaro; G. Carvalho; L. Favaro; P. Lemos; M. Paglione; C. Samorì; C. Torr

    Evolution of Structure and Superconductivity in Ba(Ni1x_{1-x}Cox_x)2_2As2_2

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    The effects of Co-substitution on Ba(Ni1x_{1-x}Cox_x)2_2As2_2 (0x0.2510\leq x\leq 0.251) single crystals grown out of Pb flux are investigated via transport, magnetic, and thermodynamic measurements. BaNi2_2As2_2 exhibits a first order tetragonal to triclinic structural phase transition at Ts=137KT_s=137 K upon cooling, and enters a superconducting phase below Tc=0.7KT_c=0.7 K. The structural phase transition is sensitive to cobalt content and is suppressed completely by x0.133x\geq0.133. The superconducting critical temperature, TcT_c, increases continuously with xx, reaching a maximum of Tc=2.3KT_c=2.3 K at the structural critical point x=0.083x=0.083 and then decreases monotonically until superconductivity is no longer observable well into the tetragonal phase. In contrast to similar BaNi2_2As2_2 substitutional studies, which show an abrupt change in TcT_c at the triclinic-tetragonal boundary that extends far into the tetragonal phase, Ba(Ni1x_{1-x}Cox_x)2_2As2_2 exhibits a dome-like phase diagram centered around the first-order critical point. Together with an anomalously large heat capacity jump ΔCe/γT2.2\Delta C_e/\gamma T\sim 2.2 at optimal doping, the smooth evolution of TcT_c in the Ba(Ni1x_{1-x}Cox_x)2_2As2_2 system suggests a mechanism for pairing enhancement other than phonon softening.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure

    On the resistivity at low temperatures in electron-doped cuprate superconductors

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    We measured the magnetoresistance as a function of temperature down to 20mK and magnetic field for a set of underdoped PrCeCuO (x=0.12) thin films with controlled oxygen content. This allows us to access the edge of the superconducting dome on the underdoped side. The sheet resistance increases with increasing oxygen content whereas the superconducting transition temperature is steadily decreasing down to zero. Upon applying various magnetic fields to suppress superconductivity we found that the sheet resistance increases when the temperature is lowered. It saturates at very low temperatures. These results, along with the magnetoresistance, cannot be described in the context of zero temperature two dimensional superconductor-to-insulator transition nor as a simple Kondo effect due to scattering off spins in the copper-oxide planes. We conjecture that due to the proximity to an antiferromagnetic phase magnetic droplets are induced. This results in negative magnetoresistance and in an upturn in the resistivity.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev.

    Nonvanishing Energy Scales at the Quantum Critical Point of CeCoIn5

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    Heat and charge transport were used to probe the magnetic field-tuned quantum critical point in the heavy-fermion metal CeCoIn5_5. A comparison of electrical and thermal resistivities reveals three characteristic energy scales. A Fermi-liquid regime is observed below TFLT_{FL}, with both transport coefficients diverging in parallel and TFL0T_{FL}\to 0 as HHcH\to H_c, the critical field. The characteristic temperature of antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations, TSFT_{SF}, is tuned to a minimum but {\it finite} value at HcH_c, which coincides with the end of the TT-linear regime in the electrical resistivity. A third temperature scale, TQPT_{QP}, signals the formation of quasiparticles, as fermions of charge ee obeying the Wiedemann-Franz law. Unlike TFLT_{FL}, it remains finite at HcH_c, so that the integrity of quasiparticles is preserved, even though the standard signature of Fermi-liquid theory fails.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures (published version

    The Origin of Anomalous Low-Temperature Downturns in the Thermal Conductivity of Cuprates

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    We show that the anomalous decrease in the thermal conductivity of cuprates below 300 mK, as has been observed recently in several cuprate materials including Pr2x_{2-x}Cex_xCuO7δ_{7-\delta} in the field-induced normal state, is due to the thermal decoupling of phonons and electrons in the sample. Upon lowering the temperature, the phonon-electron heat transfer rate decreases and, as a result, a heat current bottleneck develops between the phonons, which can in some cases be primarily responsible for heating the sample, and the electrons. The contribution that the electrons make to the total low-TT heat current is thus limited by the phonon-electron heat transfer rate, and falls rapidly with decreasing temperature, resulting in the apparent low-TT downturn of the thermal conductivity. We obtain the temperature and magnetic field dependence of the low-TT thermal conductivity in the presence of phonon-electron thermal decoupling and find good agreement with the data in both the normal and superconducting states.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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