52 research outputs found

    Bulk evidence for single-gap s-wave superconductivity in the intercalated graphite superconductor C6_6Yb

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    We report measurements of the in-plane electrical resistivity ρ\rho and the thermal conductivity κ\kappa of the intercalated graphite superconductor C6_6Yb to temperatures as low as TcT_c/100. When a field is applied along the c-axis, the residual electronic linear term κ0/T\kappa_0/T evolves in an exponential manner for Hc1<H<Hc2H_{c1} < H < H_{c2}. This activated behaviour establishes the order parameter as unambiguously s-wave, and rules out the possibility of multi-gap or unconventional superconductivity in this system.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figs, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Onset of a boson mode at superconducting critical point of underdoped YBa2Cu3Oy

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    The thermal conductivity κ\kappa of underdoped \Y was measured in the T0T \to 0 limit as a function of hole concentration pp across the superconducting critical point at pSCp_{SC} = 5.0%. ``Time doping'' was used to resolve the evolution of bosonic and fermionic contributions with high accuracy. For ppSCp \leqslant p_{SC}, we observe an additional T3T^3 contribution to κ\kappa which we attribute to the boson excitations of a phase with long-range spin or charge order. Fermionic transport, manifest as a linear term in κ\kappa, is seen to persist unaltered through pSCp_{SC}, showing that the state just below pSCp_{SC} is a thermal metal. In this state, the electrical resistivity varies as log(1/T)(1/T) and the Wiedemann-Franz law is violated

    Spalling of concrete: A synthesis of experimental tests on slabs

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    The article reviews the results of many commercial or research tests carried out in CSTB on middle size concrete slabs. They concern 22 concrete slabs, made of normal and high strength concrete, for a rather wide range of thickness and compressive strength classes. Test procedures and a synthesis of main results are presented in order to provide deeper understanding of near-reality conditions of concrete structures. The tests concerned both new and existing tunnels. Results are detailed in relation with main parameters that are identified as impacting spalling in previous studies, such as concrete composition, concrete properties and specimen size

    The metallic transport of (TMTSF)_2X organic conductors close to the superconducting phase

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    Comparing resistivity data of quasi-one dimensional superconductors (TMTSF)_2PF_6 and (TMTSF)_2ClO_4 along the least conducting c*-axis and along the high conductivity a -axis as a function of temperature and pressure, a low temperature regime is observed in which a unique scattering time governs transport along both directions of these anisotropic conductors. However, the pressure dependence of the anisotropy implies a large pressure dependence of the interlayer coupling. This is in agreement with the results of first-principles DFT calculations implying methyl group hyperconjugation in the TMTSF molecule. In this low temperature regime, both materials exhibit for rc a temperature dependence aT + bT^2. Taking into account the strong pressure dependence of the anisotropy, the T-linear rc is found to correlate with the suppression of the superconducting Tc, in close analogy with ra data. This work is revealing the domain of existence of the 3D coherent regime in the generic (TMTSF)_2X phase diagram and provides further support for the correlation between T-linear resistivity and superconductivity in non-conventional superconductors

    Accounting for end-user preferences in earthquake early warning systems

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    Earthquake early warning systems (EEWSs) that rapidly trigger risk-reduction actions after a potentially-damaging earthquake is detected are an attractive tool to reduce seismic losses. One brake on their implementation in practice is the difficulty in setting the threshold required to trigger pre-defined actions: set the level too high and the action is not triggered before potentially-damaging shaking occurs and set the level too low and the action is triggered too readily. Balancing these conflicting requirements of an EEWS requires a consideration of the preferences of its potential end users. In this article a framework to define these preferences, as part of a participatory decision making procedure, is presented. An aspect of this framework is illustrated for a hypothetical toll bridge in a seismically-active region, where the bridge owners wish to balance the risk to people crossing the bridge with the loss of toll revenue and additional travel costs in case of bridge closure. Multi-attribute utility theory (MAUT) is used to constrain the trigger threshold for four owners with different preferences. We find that MAUT is an appealing and transparent way of aiding the potentially controversial decision of what level of risk to accept in EEW

    Quantum critical point for stripe order: An organizing principle of cuprate superconductivity

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    A spin density-wave quantum critical point (QCP) is the central organizing principle of organic, iron-pnictide, heavy-fermion and electron-doped cuprate superconductors. It accounts for the superconducting Tc dome, the non-Fermi-liquid resistivity, and the Fermi-surface reconstruction. Outside the magnetically ordered phase above the QCP, scattering and pairing decrease in parallel as the system moves away from the QCP. Here we argue that a similar scenario, based on a stripe-order QCP, is a central organizing principle of hole-doped cuprate superconductors. Key properties of Eu-LSCO, Nd-LSCO and YBCO are naturally unified, including stripe order itself, its QCP, Fermi-surface reconstruction, the linear-T resistivity, and the nematic character of the pseudogap phase.Comment: Written for a special issue of Physica C on "Stripes and electronic liquid crystal

    de Haas-van Alphen oscillations in the underdoped cuprate YBa2_2Cu3_3O6.5_{6.5}

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    The de Haas-van Alphen effect was observed in the underdoped cuprate YBa2_2Cu3_3O6.5_{6.5} via a torque technique in pulsed magnetic fields up to 59 T. Above an irreversibility field of \sim30 T, the magnetization exhibits clear quantum oscillations with a single frequency of 540 T and a cyclotron mass of 1.76 times the free electron mass, in excellent agreement with previously observed Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations. The oscillations obey the standard Lifshitz-Kosevich formula of Fermi-liquid theory. This thermodynamic observation of quantum oscillations confirms the existence of a well-defined, close and coherent, Fermi surface in the pseudogap phase of cuprates.Comment: published versio
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