741 research outputs found
Effects of Superconductivity and Charge Order on the sub-Terahertz reflectivity of LaBaSrCuO
The reflectivity of both the plane and the c axis of two
single crystals of LaBaSrCuO has been measured
down to 5 cm, using coherent synchrotron radiation below 30 cm.
For = 0.085, a Josephson Plasma Resonance is detected at = 31 K
in , and a far-infrared peak (FIP) appears in the optical
conductivity below 50 K, where non-static charge ordering (CO) is reported by
X-ray scattering. For = 0.05 ( = 10 K), a FIP is observed in the
low-temperature tetragonal phase below the ordering temperature . At
1/8 doping the peak frequency scales linearly with , confirming that
the FIP is an infrared signature of CO, either static or fluctuating.Comment: v2: longer version, 9 pages, 6 color figure
Phase diagram and optical conductivity of La1.8-xEu0.2SrxCuO4
La1.8-xEu0.2SrxCuO4 (LESCO) is the member of the 214 family which exhibits
the largest intervals among the structural, charge ordering (CO), magnetic, and
superconducting transition temperatures. By using new dc transport measurements
and data in the literature we construct the phase diagram of LESCO between x =
0.8 and 0.20. This phase diagram has been further probed in ac, by measuring
the optical conductivity {\sigma}1({\omega}) of three single crystals with x =
0.11, 0.125, and 0.16 between 10 and 300 K in order to associate the
extra-Drude peaks often observed in the 214 family with a given phase. The
far-infrared peak we detect in underdoped LESCO is the hardest among them,
survives up to room temperature and is associated with charge localization
rather than with ordering. At the CO transition for the commensurate doping x =
0.125 instead the extra-Drude peak hardens and a pseudogap opens in
{\sigma}1({\omega}), approximately as wide as the maximum superconducting gap
of LSCO.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Infrared study of the charge-ordered multiferroic LuFe(2)O(4)
The reflectivity of a large LuFe(2)O(4) single crystal has been measured with
the radiation field either perpendicular or parallel to the c axis of its
rhombohedral structure, from 10 to 500K, and from 7 to 16000 cm-1. The
transition between the two-dimensional and the three-dimensional charge order
at T_(CO) = 320 K is found to change dramatically the phonon spectrum in both
polarizations. The number of the observed modes above and below T_(CO),
according to a factor-group analysis, is in good agreement with a transition
from the rhombohedral space group R{bar 3}m to the monoclinic C2/m. In the
sub-THz region a peak becomes evident at low temperature, whose origin is
discussed in relation with previous experiments.Comment: Physical Review B in pres
Low-energy electrodynamics of superconducting diamond
Heavily-boron-doped diamond films become superconducting with critical
temperatures well above 4 K. Here we first measure the reflectivity of
such a film down to 5 cm, by also using Coherent Synchrotron Radiation.
We thus determine the optical gap, the field penetration depth, the range of
action of the Ferrell-Glover-Tinkham sum rule, and the electron-phonon spectral
function. We conclude that diamond behaves as a dirty BCS superconductor.Comment: 4 pages including 3 figure
Observation of charge-density-wave excitations in manganites
In the optical conductivity of four different manganites with commensurate
charge order (CO), strong peaks appear in the meV range below the ordering
temperature T_{CO}. They are similar to those reported for one-dimensional
charge density waves (CDW) and are assigned to pinned phasons. The peaks and
their overtones allow one to obtain, for La{1-n/8}Ca{n/8}$MnO{3} with n = 5, 6,
the electron-phonon coupling, the effective mass of the CO system, and its
contribution to the dielectric constant. These results support a description of
the CO in La-Ca manganites in terms of moderately weak-coupling and of the CDW
theory.Comment: To be published on Phys. Rev. Let
Time Pressure, Time Autonomy, and Sickness Absenteeism in Hospital Employees: A Longitudinal Study on Organizational Absenteeism Records
Background
Although work absenteeism is in the focus of occupational health, longitudinal studies on organizational absenteeism records in hospital work are lacking. This longitudinal study tests time pressure and lack of time autonomy to be related to higher sickness absenteeism.
Methods
Data was collected for 180 employees (45% nurses) of a Swiss hospital at baseline and at follow-up after 1 year. Absent times (hours per month) were received from the human resources department of the hospital. One-year follow-up of organizational absenteeism records were regressed on self-reported job satisfaction, time pressure, and time autonomy (i.e., control) at baseline.
Results
A multivariate regression showed significant prediction of absenteeism by time pressure at baseline and time autonomy, indicating that a stress process is involved in some sickness absenteeism behavior. Job satisfaction and the interaction of time pressure and time autonomy did not predict sickness absenteeism.
Conclusion
Results confirmed time pressure and time autonomy as limiting factors in healthcare and a key target in work redesign.
Keywords
healthcare ; occupational health ; time autonomy ; work absenteeism ; work stres
Infrared properties of MgAlBC) single crystals in the normal and superconducting state
The reflectivity of -oriented MgAl(BC) single crystals has been measured by means of infrared
microspectroscopy for cm. An increase with doping of
the scattering rates in the and bands is observed, being more
pronounced in the C doped crystals. The -band plasma frequency also
changes with doping due to the electron doping, while the -band one is
almost unchanged. Moreover, a interband excitation, predicted
by theory, is observed at eV in the undoped sample,
and shifts to lower energies with doping. By performing theoretical calculation
of the doping dependence , the experimental observations can be
explained with the increase with electron doping of the Fermi energy of the
holes in the -band. On the other hand, the band density of
states seems not to change substantially. This points towards a reduction
driven mainly by disorder, at least for the doping level studied here. The
superconducting state has been also probed by infrared synchrotron radiation
for cm in one pure and one C-doped sample. In the
undoped sample ( = 38.5 K) a signature of the -gap only is observed.
At = 0.08 ( = 31.9 K), the presence of the contribution of the
-gap indicates dirty-limit superconductivity in both bands.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
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