92 research outputs found
Asymmetric Avalanches in the Condensate of a Zeeman-limited Superconductor
We report the non-equilibrium behavior of disordered superconducting Al films
in high Zeeman fields. We have measured the tunneling density of states of the
films through the first-order Zeeman critical field transition. We find that
films with sheet resistances of a few hundred ohms exhibit large avalanche-like
collapses of the condensate on the superheating branch of the critical field
hysteresis loop. In contrast, the transition back into the superconducting
phase (i.e., along the supercooling branch) is always continuous. The fact that
the condensate follows an unstable trajectory to the normal state suggests that
the order parameter in the hysteretic regime is not homogeneous.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to appear in PR
Exchange Field-Mediated Magnetoresistance in the Correlated Insulator Phase of Be Films
We present a study of the proximity effect between a ferromagnet and a
paramagnetic metal of varying disorder. Thin beryllium films are deposited onto
a 5 nm-thick layer of the ferromagnetic insulator EuS. This bilayer arrangement
induces an exchange field, , of a few tesla in low resistance Be films
with sheet resistance , where is the quantum resistance.
We show that survives in very high resistance films and, in fact,
appears to be relatively insensitive to the Be disorder. We exploit this fact
to produce a giant low-field magnetoresistance in the correlated insulator
phase of Be films with .Comment: To be published in Physical Review Letter
Asymmetric avalanche behavior in a zeeman-limited superconductor
We have performed transport and tunneling density of states measurements of ultra-thin Al films through The first-order parallel critical field transition. The transition is intrinsically hysteretic and exhibits avalanche-like jumps in both resistivity and tunneling density states. Tunneling measurements on films with sheet resistances of a few hundred ohms show large avalanche-like collapses of The condensate on The superheating branch of The critical field hysteresis loop. In contrast, The transition back into The superconducting phase (i.e., along The supercooling branch) is always continuous
Electrostatic tuning of the proximity-induced exchange field in EuS/Al bilayers
We demonstrate that the proximity-induced exchange field Hex in ferromagnetic-paramagnetic bilayers can be modulated with an electric field. An electrostatic gate arrangement is used to tune the magnitude of Hex in the Al component of EuS/Al bilayers. In samples with Hex∼2 T, we were able to produce modulations of ±10 mT with the application of perpendicular electric fields of the order of ±106 V/cm. We discuss several possible mechanisms accounting for the electric field\u27s influence on the interfacial coupling between the Al layer and the ferromagnetic insulator EuS, along with the prospects of producing a superconducting field-effect transistor. © 2013 American Physical Society
Magnetic, thermodynamic, and electrical transport properties of the noncentrosymmetric B20 germanides MnGe and CoGe
We present magnetization, specific heat, resistivity, and Hall effect
measurements on the cubic B20 phase of MnGe and CoGe and compare to
measurements of isostructural FeGe and electronic structure calculations. In
MnGe, we observe a transition to a magnetic state at K as identified
by a sharp peak in the ac magnetic susceptibility, as well as second phase
transition at lower temperature that becomes apparent only at finite magnetic
field. We discover two phase transitions in the specific heat at temperatures
much below the Curie temperature one of which we associate with changes to the
magnetic structure. A magnetic field reduces the temperature of this transition
which corresponds closely to the sharp peak observed in the ac susceptibility
at fields above 5 kOe. The second of these transitions is not affected by the
application of field and has no signature in the magnetic properties or our
crystal structure parameters. Transport measurements indicate that MnGe is
metal with a negative magnetoresistance similar to that seen in isostructural
FeGe and MnSi. Hall effect measurements reveal a carrier concentration of about
0.5 carriers per formula unit also similar to that found in FeGe and MnSi. CoGe
is shown to be a low carrier density metal with a very small, nearly
temperature independent diamagnetic susceptibility.Comment: 16 pages 23 figure
Competing magnetic states, disorder, and the magnetic character of Fe3Ga4
The physical properties of metamagnetic FeGa single crystals are
investigated to explore the sensitivity of the magnetic states to temperature,
magnetic field, and sample history. The data reveal a moderate anisotropy in
the magnetization and the metamagnetic critical field along with features in
the specific heat at the magnetic transitions K and K. Both
and are found to be sensitive to the annealing conditions of the
crystals suggesting that disorder affects the competition between the
ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic (AFM) states. Resistivity measurements
reveal metallic transport with a sharp anomaly associated with the transition
at . The Hall effect is dominated by the anomalous contribution which
rivals that of magnetic semiconductors in magnitude ( cm at 2 T
and 350 K) and undergoes a change of sign upon cooling into the low temperature
FM state. The temperature and field dependence of the Hall effect indicate that
the magnetism is likely to be highly itinerant in character and that a
significant change in the electronic structure accompanies the magnetic
transitions. We observe a contribution from the topological Hall effect in the
AFM phase suggesting a non-coplanar contribution to the magnetism. Electronic
structure calculations predict an AFM ground state with a wavevector parallel
to the crystallographic -axis preferred over the experimentally measured FM
state by 50 meV per unit cell. However, supercell calculations with a
small density of Fe-antisite defects introduced tend to stabilize the FM over
the AFM state indicating that antisite defects may be the cause of the
sensitivity to sample synthesis conditions.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, and 4 supplementary table
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