101 research outputs found
Effects of Neutron Irradiation on Carbon Doped MgB2 Wire Segments
We have studied the evolution of superconducting and normal state properties
of neutron irradiated Mg(BC) wire segments as a function
of post exposure annealing time and temperature. The initial fluence fully
suppressed superconductivity and resulted in an anisotropic expansion of the
unit cell. Superconductivity was restored by post-exposure annealing. The upper
critical field, H(T=0), approximately scales with T starting with an
undamaged T near 37 K and H(T=0) near 32 T. Up to an annealing
temperature of 400 C the recovery of T tends to coincide with a
decrease in the normal state resistivity and a systematic recovery of the
lattice parameters. Above 400 C a decrease in order along the c- direction
coincides with an increase in resistivity, but no apparent change in the
evolution of T and H. To first order, it appears that carbon doping
and neutron damaging effect the superconducting properties of MgB
independently
Effects of Co substitution on thermodynamic and transport properties and anisotropic in Ba(FeCo)As single crystals
Single crystalline samples of Ba(FeCo)As with
have been grown and characterized via microscopic, thermodynamic and transport
measurements. With increasing Co substitution, the thermodynamic and transport
signatures of the structural (high temperature tetragonal to low temperature
orthorhombic) and magnetic (high temperature non magnetic to low temperature
antiferromagnetic) transitions are suppressed at a rate of roughly 15 K per
percent Co. In addition, for superconductivity is stabilized,
rising to a maximum of approximately 23 K for and
decreasing for higher values. The phase diagram for
Ba(FeCo)As indicates that either superconductivity can
exist in both low temperature crystallographic phases or that there is a
structural phase separation. Anisotropic, superconducting, upper critical field
data () show a significant and clear change in anisotropy between
samples that have higher temperature structural phase transitions and those
that do not. These data show that the superconductivity is sensitive to the
suppression of the higher temperature phase transition
Multiple regions of quantum criticality in YbAgGe
Dilation and thermopower measurements on YbAgGe, a heavy-fermion
antiferromagnet, clarify and refine the magnetic field-temperature (H-T) phase
diagram and reveal a field-induced phase with T-linear resistivity. On the
low-H side of this phase we find evidence for a first-order transition and
suggest that YbAgGe at 4.5 T may be close to a quantum critical end point. On
the high-H side our results are consistent with a second-order transition
suppressed to a quantum critical point near 7.2 T. We discuss these results in
light of global phase diagrams proposed for Kondo lattice systems
Temperature-doping phase diagrams for Ba(Fe1-xTMx)2As2(TM=Ni, Cu, Cu / Co) single crystals
Microscopic, structural, transport and thermodynamic measurements of single
crystalline Ba(Fe1-xTMx)2As2 (TM = Ni and Cu) series, as well as two mixed TM =
Cu / Co series, are reported. All the transport and thermodynamic measurements
indicate that the structural and magnetic phase transitions at 134 K in pure
BaFe2As2 are monotonically suppressed and increasingly separated in a similar
manner by these dopants. In the Ba(Fe1-xNix)2As2 (x =< 0.072),
superconductivity, with Tc up to 19 K, is stabilized for 0.024 =< x =< 0.072.
In the Ba(Fe1-xCux)2As2 (x =< 0.356) series, although the structural and
magnetic transitions are suppressed, there is only a very limited region of
superconductivity: a sharp drop of the resistivity to zero near 2.1 K is found
only for the x = 0.044 samples. In the Ba(Fe1-x-yCoxCuy)2As2 series,
superconductivity, with Tc values up to 12 K (x ~ 0.022 series) and 20 K (x ~
0.047 series), is stabilized. Quantitative analysis of the detailed
temperature-dopant concentration (T-x) and temperature-extra electrons (T-e)
phase diagrams of these series shows that there exists a limited range of the
number of extra electrons added, inside which the superconductivity can be
stabilized if the structural and magnetic phase transitions are suppressed
enough. Moreover, comparison with pressure-temperature phase diagram data, for
samples spanning the whole doping range, further reenforces the conclusion that
suppression of the structural / magnetic phase transition temperature enhances
Tc on the underdoped side, but for the overdoped side Tcmax is determined by e.
Therefore, by choosing the combination of dopants that are used, we can adjust
the relative positions of the upper phase lines (structural and magnetic phase
transitions) and the superconducting dome to control the occurrence and
disappearance of the superconductivity in transition metal, electron-doped
BaFe2As2.Comment: 42 pages, 27 figures, 5 table
Superconducting and Normal State Properties of Neutron Irradiated MgB2
We have performed a systematic study of the evolution of the superconducting
and normal state properties of neutron irradiated MgB wire segments as a
function of fluence and post exposure annealing temperature and time. All
fluences used suppressed the transition temperature, Tc, below 5 K and expanded
the unit cell. For each annealing temperature Tc recovers with annealing time
and the upper critical field, Hc2(T=0), approximately scales with Tc. By
judicious choice of fluence, annealing temperature and time, the Tc of damaged
MgB2 can be tuned to virtually any value between 5 and 39 K. For higher
annealing temperatures and longer annealing times the recovery of Tc tends to
coincide with a decrease in the normal state resistivity and a systematic
recovery of the lattice parameters.Comment: Updated version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Systematic effects of carbon doping on the superconducting properties of Mg(BC)
The upper critical field, , of Mg(BC) has been
measured in order to probe the maximum magnetic field range for
superconductivity that can be attained by C doping. Carbon doped boron
filaments are prepared by CVD techniques, and then these fibers are then
exposed to Mg vapor to form the superconducting compound. The transition
temperatures are depressed about C and rises at about C. This means that 3.5% C will depress from to and
raise from to . Higher fields are probably
attainable in the region of 5% C to 7% C. These rises in are
accompanied by a rise in resistivity at from about
to about . Given that the samples are polycrystalline wire
segments, the experimentally determined curves represent the upper
manifold associated with
A versatile and compact capacitive dilatometer
We describe the design, construction, calibration, and operation of a
relatively simple differential capacitive dilatometer suitable for measurements
of thermal expansion and magnetostriction from 300 K to below 1 K with a
low-temperature resolution of about 0.05 angstroms. The design is characterized
by an open architecture permitting measurements on small samples with a variety
of shapes. Dilatometers of this design have operated successfully with a
commercial physical property measurement system, with several types of
cryogenic refrigeration systems, in vacuum, in helium exchange gas, and while
immersed in liquid helium (magnetostriction only) to temperatures of 30 mK and
in magnetic fields to 45 T.Comment: 8 pages, incorporating 6 figures, submitted to Rev. Sci. Instru
Vertical Confinement and Evolution of Reentrant Insulating Transition in the Fractional Quantum Hall Regime
We have observed an anomalous shift of the high field reentrant insulating
phases in a two-dimensional electron system (2DES) tightly confined within a
narrow GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well. Instead of the well-known transitions into the
high field insulating states centered around , the 2DES confined
within an 80\AA-wide quantum well exhibits the transition at .
Comparably large quantum lifetime of the 2DES in narrow well discounts the
effect of disorder and points to confinement as the primary driving force
behind the evolution of the reentrant transition.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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