79 research outputs found
Absence of confinement in (SrTiO3)/(SrTi0:8Nb0:2O3) superlattices
The reduction of dimensionality is an efficient pathway to boost the
performances of thermoelectric materials, it leads to the quantum confinement
of the carriers and thus to large Seebeck coefficients (S) and it also
suppresses the thermal conductivity by increasing the phonon scattering
processes. However, quantum confinement in superlattices is not always easy to
achieve and needs to be carefully validated. In the past decade, large values
of S have been measured in (SrTiO3)/(SrTi0:8Nb0:2O3) superlattices (Nat. Mater.
6, 129 (2007) and Appl. Phys. Lett. 91, 192105 (2007)). In the -doped
compound, the measured S was almost 6 times larger than that of the bulk
material. This huge increase has been attributed to the two dimensional
confinement of the carriers in the doped regions. In this work, we demonstrate
that the experimental data can be well explained quantitatively within the
scenario in which electrons are delocalized in both in-plane and growth
directions, hence strongly suggesting that the confinement picture in these
superlattices may be unlikely.Comment: 5 figures, manuscript submitte
Unified modelling of the thermoelectric properties in SrTiO3
Thermoelectric materials are opening a promising pathway to address energy
conversion issues governed by a competition between thermal and electronic
transport. Improving the efficiency is a difficult task, a challenge that
requires new strategies to unearth optimized compounds. We present a theory of
thermoelectric transport in electron doped SrTiO3, based on a realistic tight
binding model that includes relevant scattering processes. We compare our
calculations against a wide panel of experimental data, both bulk and thin
films. We find a qualitative and quantitative agreement over both a wide range
of temperatures and carrier concentrations, from light to heavily doped.
Moreover, the results appear insensitive to the nature of the dopant La, B, Gd
and Nb. Thus, the quantitative success found in the case of SrTiO3, reveals an
efficient procedure to explore new routes to improve the thermoelectric
properties in oxides.Comment: 5 figures, manuscript submitte
Absence of Ferromagnetism in Mn-doped Tetragonal Zirconia
In a recent letter, it has been predicted within first principle studies that
Mn-doped ZrO2 compounds could be good candidate for spintronics application
because expected to exhibit ferromagnetism far beyond room temperature. Our
purpose is to address this issue experimentally for Mn-doped tetragonal
zirconia. We have prepared polycrystalline samples of Y0.15(Zr0.85-yMny)O2
(y=0, 0.05, 0.10, 0.15 & 0.20) by using standard solid state method at
equilibrium. The obtained samples were carefully characterized by using x-ray
diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, elemental color mapping, X-ray
photoemission spectroscopy and magnetization measurements. From the detailed
structural analyses, we have observed that the 5% Mn doped compound
crystallized into two symmetries (dominating tetragonal & monoclinic), whereas
higher Mn doped compounds are found to be in the tetragonal symmetry only. The
spectral splitting of the Mn 3s core-level x-ray photoelectron spectra confirms
that Mn ions are in the Mn3+ oxidation state and indicate a local magnetic
moment of about 4.5 {\mu}B/Mn. Magnetic measurements showed that compounds up
to 10% of Mn doping are paramagnetic with antiferromagnetic interactions.
However, higher Mn doped compound exhibits local ferrimagnetic ordering. Thus,
no ferromagnetism has been observed for all Mn-doped tetragonal ZrO2 samples.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
Magnetic Resonant excitations in High-{} superconductors
The observation of an unusual spin resonant excitation in the superconducting
state of various High-Tc ~copper oxides by inelastic neutron scattering
measurements is reviewed. This magnetic mode % (that does not exist in
conventional superconductors) is discussed in light of a few theoretical models
and likely corresponds to a spin-1 collective mode.Comment: 4 figures, Proceedings conference MSM'03 (september 2003) in Monastir
(Tunisia) to be published in Phys. Stat. Solid
Resonant magnetic excitations at high energy in superconducting
A detailed inelastic neutron scattering study of the high temperature
superconductor provides evidence of new resonant
magnetic features, in addition to the well known resonant mode at 41 meV: (i) a
commensurate magnetic resonance peak at 53 meV with an even symmetry under
exchange of two adjacent layers; and (ii) high energy
incommensurate resonant spin excitations whose spectral weight is around 54
meV. The locus and the spectral weight of these modes can be understood by
considering the momentum shape of the electron-hole spin-flip continuum of
d-wave superconductors. This provides new insight into the interplay between
collective spin excitations and the continuum of electron-hole excitations.Comment: 5 figure
Doping Dependence of Bilayer Resonant Spin Excitations in
Resonant magnetic modes with odd and even symmetries were studied by
inelastic neutron scattering experiments in the bilayer high-
superconductor over a wide doping range. The
threshold of the spin excitation continuum in the superconducting state,
deduced from the energies and spectral weights of both modes, is compared with
the superconducting d-wave gap, measured on the same samples by electronic
Raman scattering in the symmetry. Above a critical doping level of
, both mode energies and the continuum threshold coincide.
We find a simple scaling relationship between the characteristic energies and
spectral weights of both modes, which indicates that the resonant modes are
bound states in the superconducting energy gap, as predicted by the
spin-exciton model of the resonant mode.Comment: 4 figure
2D orbital-like magnetic order in
In high temperature copper oxides superconductors, a novel magnetic order
associated with the pseudogap phase has been identified in two different
cuprate families over a wide region of temperature and doping. We here report
the observation below 120 K of a similar magnetic ordering in the archetypal
cuprate (LSCO) system for x=0.085. In contrast to the
previous reports, the magnetic ordering in LSCO is {\it\bf only} short range
with an in-plane correlation length of 10 \AA\ and is bidimensional
(2D). Such a less pronounced order suggests an interaction with other
electronic instabilities. In particular, LSCO also exhibits a strong tendency
towards stripes ordering at the expense of the superconducting state.Comment: 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Absence of an isotope effect in the magnetic resonance in high- superconductors
An inelastic neutron scattering experiment has been performed in the
high-temperature superconductor to search for an
oxygen-isotope shift of the well-known magnetic resonance mode at 41 meV.
Contrary to a recent prediction (I. Eremin, {\it et al.}, Phys. Rev. B {\bf
69}, 094517 (2004)), a negligible shift (at best +0.2 meV) of the
resonance energy is observed upon oxygen isotope substitution
(OO). This suggests a negligible spin-phonon interaction in
the high- cuprates at optimal doping.Comment: 3 figure
Universal relation between magnetic resonance and superconducting gap in unconventional superconductors
Unconventional superconductors such as the high-transition temperature
cuprates, heavy-fermion systems and iron arsenide-based compounds exhibit
antiferromagnetic fluctuations that are dominated by a resonance, a collective
spin-one excitation mode in the superconducting state. Here we demonstrate the
existence of a universal linear relation, , between the
magnetic resonance energy (Er) and the superconducting pairing gap (),
spanning two orders of magnitude in energy. This relation is valid for
materials that range from being close to the Mott-insulating limit to being on
the border of itinerant magnetism. Since the common excitonic picture of the
resonance has not led to such universality, our observation suggests a much
deeper connection between antiferromagnetic fluctuations and unconventional
superconductivity.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
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