75 research outputs found
Evidence of unconventional low-frequency dynamics in the normal phase of Ba(Fe1-xRhx)2As2 iron-based supercondutors
This work presents 75As NMR spin echo decay rate (1/T2) measurements in
Ba(Fe1-xRhx)2As2 superconductors, for 0.041 < x < 0.094. It is shown that 1/T2
increases upon cooling, in the normal phase, suggesting the onset of an
unconventional very low-frequency activated dynamic. The correlation times of
the fluctuations and their energy barriers are derived. The motion is favored
at large Rh content, while it is hindered by the application of a magnetic
field perpendicular to the FeAs layers. The same dynamic is observed in the
spin-lattice relaxation rate, in a quantitatively consistent manner. These
results are discussed in the light of nematic fluctuations involving domain
wall motion. The analogies with the behaviour observed in the cuprates are also
outlined
Evidence for a vortex-glass transition in superconducting Ba(FeCo)As
Measurements of magneto-resistivity and magnetic susceptibility were
performed on single crystals of superconducting
Ba(FeCo)As close to the conditions of optimal
doping. The high quality of the investigated samples allows us to reveal a
dynamic scaling behaviour associated with a vortex-glass phase transition in
the limit of weak degree of quenched disorder. Accordingly, the dissipative
component of the ac susceptibility is well reproduced within the framework of
Havriliak-Negami relaxation, assuming a critical power-law divergence for the
characteristic correlation time of the vortex dynamics. Remarkably, the
random disorder introduced by the FeCo chemical substitution is
found to act on the vortices as a much weaker quenched disorder than previously
reported for cuprate superconductors such as, e.g.,
YPrBaCuO.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Glassy Transition in the Vortex Lattice of Ba(Fe0.93Rh0.07)2As2 superconductor, probed by NMR and ac-susceptibility
By using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and ac-susceptibility, the characteristic
correlation times for the vortex dynamics, in an iron-based superconductor,
have been derived. Upon cooling, the vortex dynamics displays a crossover
consistent with a vortex glass transition. The correlation times, in the fast
motions regime, merge onto a universal curve which is fit by the Vogel-Fulcher
law, rather than by an Arrhenius law. Moreover, the pinning barrier shows a
weak dependence on the magnetic field which can be heuristically justified
within a fragile glass scenario. In addition, the glass freezing temperatures
obtained by the two techniques merge onto the de Almeida-Thouless line. Finally
the phase diagram for the mixed phase has been derived.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figure
Enhancement of low-frequency fluctuations and superconductivity breakdown in Mn-dopedLa1−yYyFeAsO0.89F0.11superconductors
19F NMR measurements in optimally electron-doped La1-yYyFe1-xMnxAsO0.89F0.11 superconductors are
presented. The effect of Mn doping on the superconducting phase is studied for two series of compounds
(y = 0 and y = 0.2) where the chemical pressure is varied by substituting La with Y. In the y = 0.2 series
superconductivity is suppressed for Mn contents an order of magnitude larger than for y = 0. For both series a
peak in the 19FNMRnuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T1 emerges upon Mn doping and becomes significantly
enhanced on approaching the quantum phase transition between the superconducting and magnetic phases. 19F
NMR linewidth measurements show that for similar Mn contents magnetic correlations are more pronounced in
the y = 0 series, at variance with what one would expect for Q = (π/a,0) spin correlations. These observations
suggest that Mn doping tends to reduce fluctuations at Q = (π/a,0) and to enhance other low-frequency modes.
The effect of this transfer of spectral weight on the superconducting pairing is discussed along with the charge
localization induced by Mn
Enhancement of low-frequency fluctuations and superconductivity breakdown in Mn-doped La
19F NMR measurements in optimally electron-doped La1-yYyFe1-xMnxAsO0.89F0.11 superconductors are
presented. The effect of Mn doping on the superconducting phase is studied for two series of compounds
(y = 0 and y = 0.2) where the chemical pressure is varied by substituting La with Y. In the y = 0.2 series
superconductivity is suppressed for Mn contents an order of magnitude larger than for y = 0. For both series a
peak in the 19FNMRnuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T1 emerges upon Mn doping and becomes significantly
enhanced on approaching the quantum phase transition between the superconducting and magnetic phases. 19F
NMR linewidth measurements show that for similar Mn contents magnetic correlations are more pronounced in
the y = 0 series, at variance with what one would expect for Q = (π/a,0) spin correlations. These observations
suggest that Mn doping tends to reduce fluctuations at Q = (π/a,0) and to enhance other low-frequency modes.
The effect of this transfer of spectral weight on the superconducting pairing is discussed along with the charge
localization induced by Mn
Anisotropy dependence of the fluctuation spectroscopy in the critical and gaussian regimes in superconducting NaFe1-xCoxAs single crystals
We investigate thermal fluctuations in terms of diamagnetism and magnetotransport in superconducting NaFe1-xCoxAs single crystals with different doping levels. Results show that in the case of optimal doped and lightly overdoped (x= 0.03, 0.05) crystals the analysis in the critical as well as in the Gaussian fluctuation regions is consistent with the Ginzburg-Landau 3D fluctuation theory. However, in the case of strongly overdoped samples (x >= 0.07) the Ullah-Dorsey scaling of the fluctuation induced magnetoconductivity in the critical region confirms that thermal fluctuations exhibit a 3D anisotropic nature only in a narrow temperature region around T-c(H). This is consistent with the fact that in these samples the fluctuation effects in the Gaussian region above T-c may be described by the Lawrence-Doniach approach. Our results indicate that the anisotropy of these materials increases significantly with the doping level
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