828 research outputs found
Effects of La substitution on superconducting state of CeCoIn5
We report effects of La substitution on superconducting state of heavy
fermion superconductor CeCoIn5, as seen in transport and magnetization
measurements. As opposed to the case of conventional superconductors, pair
breaking by nonmagnetic La results in depression of Tc and indicates strong gap
anisotropy. Upper critical field Hc2 values decrease with increased La
concentration, but the critical field anisotropy, gamma=Hc2(a)/Hc2(c), does not
change in the Ce_{1-x}La_xCoIn5 (x=0-0.15). The electronic system is in the
clean limit for all values of x.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Heavy fermion superconductivity and magnetic order in non-centrosymmetric
is a novel heavy fermion superconductor, crystallising in the
structure as a tetragonally distorted low symmetry variant of the
structure type. exhibits antiferromagnetic order at
K and enters into a heavy fermion superconducting state at
K. Large values of T/K and T refer to heavy quasiparticles forming Cooper pairs. Hitherto, is the first heavy fermion superconductor without a center of
symmetry.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Anomalous NMR Magnetic Shifts in CeCoIn_5
We report ^{115}In and ^{59}Co Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) measurements
in the heavy fermion superconductor CeCoIn_5 above and below T_c. The hyperfine
couplings of the In and Co are anisotropic and exhibit dramatic changes below
50K due to changes in the crystal field level populations of the Ce ions. Below
T_c the spin susceptibility is suppressed, indicating singlet pairing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Specific Heat of Ce(1-x)La(x)RhIn(5) in Zero and Applied Magnetic Field: A Very Rich Phase Diagram
Specific heat and magnetization results as a function of field on single- and
poly-crystalline samples of Ce(1-x)La(x)RhIn(5) show 1.) a specific heat gamma
of about 100 mJ/moleK^2 (in agreement with recent dHvA results of Alvers et
al.); 2.) upturns at low temperatures in C/T and chi that fit a power law
behavior ( Griffiths phase non-Fermi liquid behavior); 3.) a field induced
anomaly in C/T as well as M vs H behavior in good agreement with the recent
Griffiths phase theory of Castro Neto and Jones, where M~H at low field, M ~
H^lambda above a crossover field, C/T ~ T^(-1+lambda) at low field, and C/T ~
(H^(2+lambda/2)/T^(3-lambda/2))*exp(-mu(eff)H/T) above the same crossover field
as determined in the magnetization and where lambda is independently determined
from the temperature dependence of chi at low temperatures, chi ~ T^(-1+lambda)
and low fields.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Physical Review
Mixed-State Thermodynamics of Superconductors with Moderately Large Paramagnetic Effects
Effects of Pauli paramagnetism on thermodynamic quantities in a vortex state,
such as the specific heat and magnetization , are studied using the
quasiclassical Eilenberger formalism. We demonstrate that with an increase of
paramagnetic depairing effect, the sigh of the curvature of the field
dependence of changes from negative to positive, and that the Maki
parameter becomes an increasing function of temperature. Our results
provide a natural explanation for the unusual field dependence of seen in
CeCoIn in terms of the paramagnetic effect.Comment: Published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 74, 2181 (2005
Coherent Spin-Phonon Coupling in the Layered Ferrimagnet Mn3Si2Te6
We utilize ultrafast photoexcitation to drive coherent lattice oscillations
in the layered ferrimagnetic crystal Mn3Si2Te6, which significantly stiffen
below the magnetic ordering temperature. We suggest that this is due to an
exchange-mediated contraction of the lattice, stemming from strong
magneto-structural coupling in this material. Additionally, simulations of the
transient incoherent dynamics reveal the importance of spin relaxation channels
mediated by optical and acoustic phonon scattering. Our findings highlight the
importance of spin-lattice coupling in van der Waals magnets and a promising
route for their dynamic optical control through their intertwined electronic,
lattice, and spin degrees of freedom
High pressure phase diagrams of CeRhIn and CeCoIn studied by ac calorimetry
The pressure-temperature phase diagrams of the heavy fermion antiferromagnet
CeRhIn and the heavy fermion superconductor CeCoIn have been studied
under hydrostatic pressure by ac calorimetry and ac susceptibility measurements
using diamond anvil cells with argon as pressure medium. In CeRhIn, the use
of a highly hydrostatic pressure transmitting medium allows for a clean
simultaneous determination by a bulk probe of the antiferromagnetic and
superconducting transitions. We compare our new phase diagram with the previous
ones, discuss the nature (first or second order) of the various lines, and the
coexistence of antiferromagnetic order and superconductivity. The link between
the collaps of the superconducting heat anomaly and the broadening of the
antiferromagnetic transition points to an inhomogeneous appearence of
superconductivity below GPa. Homogeneous bulk
superconductivity is only observed above this critical pressure. We present a
detailed analysis of the influence of pressure inomogeneities on the specific
heat anomalies which emphasizes that the observed broadening of the transitions
near is connected with the first order transition. For CeCoIn we show
that the large specific heat anomaly observed at at ambient pressure is
suppressed linearly at least up to 3 GPa
Withdrawal-induced delirium associated with a benzodiazepine switch: a case report
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Introduced in the early 1960s, diazepam remains among the most frequently prescribed benzodiazepine-type sedatives and hypnotics. Patients with chronic use of short-acting benzodiazepines are frequently switched to diazepam because the accumulating, long-acting metabolite, N-desmethyl-diazepam, prevents benzodiazepine-associated withdrawal symptoms, which can occur during trough plasma levels of short-acting benzodiazepines. Although mild to moderate withdrawal symptoms are frequently observed during benzodiazepine switching to diazepam, severe medical complications associated with this treatment approach have thus far not been reported.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A 64-year-old female Caucasian with major depression, alcohol dependence and benzodiazepine dependence was successfully treated for depression and, after lorazepam-assisted alcohol detoxification, was switched from lorazepam to diazepam to facilitate benzodiazepine discontinuation. Subsequent to the benzodiazepine switch, our patient unexpectedly developed an acute delirious state, which quickly remitted after re-administration of lorazepam. A newly diagnosed early form of mixed dementia, combining both vascular and Alzheimer-type lesions, was found as a likely contributing factor for the observed vulnerability to benzodiazepine-induced withdrawal symptoms.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Chronic use of benzodiazepines is common in the elderly and a switch to diazepam often precedes benzodiazepine discontinuation trials. However, contrary to common clinical practice, benzodiazepine switching to diazepam may require cross-titration with slow tapering of the first benzodiazepine to allow for the build-up of N-desmethyl-diazepam, in order to safely prevent severe withdrawal symptoms. Alternatively, long-term treatment with low doses of benzodiazepines may be considered, especially in elderly patients with chronic use of benzodiazepines and proven vulnerability to benzodiazepine-associated withdrawal symptoms.</p
Angiographic outcome of coronary artery bypass grafts: Radial Artery Database International Alliance
BACKGROUND: We used a large patient-level dataset including six angiographic randomized trials (RCTs) on coronary artery bypass conduits to explore incidence and determinants of coronary graft failure. METHODS: Patient-level angiographic data of six RCTs comparing long-term outcomes of the radial artery and other conduits were joined. Primary outcome was graft occlusion at maximum follow-up. The analysis was divided as follows: 1) left anterior descending coronary (LAD) distribution, 2) non-LAD distribution (circumflex and right coronary artery). To identify predictors of graft occlusion, mixed model multivariable Cox regression including all baseline characteristics with stratification by individual trials was used. RESULTS: 1091 patients and 2281 grafts were included (921 left internal mammary arteries, 74 right internal mammary arteries, 710 radial artery and 576 saphenous veins; all left internal mammary arteries were used on the LAD, the other conduits were used on the non-LAD distribution; mean angiographic follow up: 65±29 months). Occlusion rate was 2.3%, 13.5%, 9.4%, 17.5% for the left internal mammary arteries, right internal mammary arteries, radial artery and saphenous veins, respectively. At multivariable analysis type of conduit used, age, female gender, left ventricular ejection fraction<50% and use of the Y graft were significantly associated with graft occlusion in the non-LAD distribution. CONCLUSIONS: Our analyses showed that failure of the left internal mammary arteries to LAD bypass is a very uncommon event. For the non-LAD distribution, the non-use of radial artery, age, female gender, left ventricular ejection fraction<50% and use of the Y graft configuration were significantly associated with mid-term graft failure
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