196 research outputs found

    The barocaloric effect: A Spin-off of the Discovery of High-Temperature Superconductivity

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    Some key results obtained in joint research projects with Alex M\"uller are summarized, concentrating on the invention of the barocaloric effect and its application for cooling as well as on important findings in the field of high-temperature superconductivity resulting from neutron scattering experiments.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure

    Resultado de aplicar aprendizaje inverso en disciplinas de grado

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    Este documento recoge los resultados de la experiencia de aplicar el Aprendizaje Inverso a estudiantes de 3º del Grado en Comercio por un lado y a otros estudiantes, muchos de ellos profesionales en el campo de la economía y la empresa, del Curso especial de Adaptación para titulados de antiguos planes de estudio. El trabajo se ha centrado sobre “Estrategias de determinación de precios basadas en el valor para el cliente”, punto contenido en el Programa de la asignatura Gestión de Ventas y Proceso Comercial. Utilizando técnicas de investigación cualitativa tales como brainstornig y focus groupEconomía Financiera y ContabilidadOrganización de Empresas y Comercialización e Investigación de Mercados

    Dynamical charge inhomogeneity and crystal-field fluctuations for 4f ions in high-Tc cuprates

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    The main relaxation mechanism of crystal-field excitations in rare-earth ions in cuprates is believed to be provided by the fluctuations of crystalline electric field induced by a dynamic charge inhomogeneity generic for the doped cuprates. We address the generalized granular model as one of the model scenario for such an ingomogeneity where the cuprate charge subsystem remind that of Wigner crystal with the melting transition and phonon-like positional excitation modes. Formal description of R-ion relaxation coincides with that of recently suggested magnetoelastic mechanism.Comment: 4 page

    Pseudogap behavior of nuclear spin relaxation in high Tc superconductors in terms of phase separation

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    We analyze anew experiments on the NMR in cuprates and find an important information on their phase separation and its stripe character hidden in the dependence of 1/63T11/^{63}T_{1} on degree of doping. In a broad class of materials 1/63T11/^{63}T_{1} is the sum of two terms: the temperature independent one attributed to ``incommensurate'' stripes that occur at external doping, and an ``universal'' temperature dependent term ascribed to moving metallic and AF sub-phases. We argue that the frustrated first order phase transition in a broad temperature interval bears a dynamical character.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; some comments and references added; accepted for publication in JETP Letter

    Pressure Studies on a High-TcT_c Superconductor Pseudogap and Critical Temperatures

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    We report simultaneous hydrostatic pressure studies on the critical temperature TcT_c and on the pseudogap temperature TT^* performed through resistivity measurements on an optimally doped high-TcT_c oxide Hg0.82Re0.18Ba2Ca2Cu3O8+δHg_{0.82}Re_{0.18}Ba_2Ca_2Cu_3O_{8+\delta}. The resistivity is measured as function of the temperature for several different applied pressure below 1GPa. We find that both TcT_c and TT^* increases linearly with the pressure. This result demonstrate that the well known intrinsic pressure effect on TcT_c is also present at TT^* and both temperatures are originated by the same superconducting mechanism.Comment: 4 pages and 2 figures in eps, final versio

    Upper critical field for underdoped high-T_c superconductors. Pseudogap and stripe--phase

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    We investigate the upper critical field in a stripe--phase and in the presence of a phenomenological pseudogap. Our results indicate that the formation of stripes affects the Landau orbits and results in an enhancement of Hc2H_{c2}. On the other hand, phenomenologically introduced pseudogap leads to a reduction of the upper critical field. This effect is of particular importance when the magnitude of the gap is of the order of the superconducting transition temperature. We have found that a suppression of the upper critical field takes place also for the gap that originates from the charge--density waves.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    A Trial of Early Antiretrovirals and Isoniazid Preventive Therapy in Africa

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    BACKGROUND: In sub-Saharan Africa, the burden of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated tuberculosis is high. We conducted a trial with a 2-by-2 factorial design to assess the benefits of early antiretroviral therapy (ART), 6-month isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT), or both among HIV-infected adults with high CD4+ cell counts in Ivory Coast. METHODS: We included participants who had HIV type 1 infection and a CD4+ count of less than 800 cells per cubic millimeter and who met no criteria for starting ART according to World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines. Participants were randomly assigned to one of four treatment groups: deferred ART (ART initiation according to WHO criteria), deferred ART plus IPT, early ART (immediate ART initiation), or early ART plus IPT. The primary end point was a composite of diseases included in the case definition of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), non-AIDS-defining cancer, non-AIDS-defining invasive bacterial disease, or death from any cause at 30 months. We used Cox proportional models to compare outcomes between the deferred-ART and early-ART strategies and between the IPT and no-IPT strategies. RESULTS: A total of 2056 patients (41% with a baseline CD4+ count of ≥500 cells per cubic millimeter) were followed for 4757 patient-years. A total of 204 primary end-point events were observed (3.8 events per 100 person-years; 95% confidence interval [CI], 3.3 to 4.4), including 68 in patients with a baseline CD4+ count of at least 500 cells per cubic millimeter (3.2 events per 100 person-years; 95% CI, 2.4 to 4.0). Tuberculosis and invasive bacterial diseases accounted for 42% and 27% of primary end-point events, respectively. The risk of death or severe HIV-related illness was lower with early ART than with deferred ART (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.41 to 0.76; adjusted hazard ratio among patients with a baseline CD4+ count of ≥500 cells per cubic millimeter, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.33 to 0.94) and lower with IPT than with no IPT (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.48 to 0.88; adjusted hazard ratio among patients with a baseline CD4+ count of ≥500 cells per cubic millimeter, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.36 to 1.01). The 30-month probability of grade 3 or 4 adverse events did not differ significantly among the strategies. CONCLUSIONS: In this African country, immediate ART and 6 months of IPT independently led to lower rates of severe illness than did deferred ART and no IPT, both overall and among patients with CD4+ counts of at least 500 cells per cubic millimeter. (Funded by the French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis; TEMPRANO ANRS 12136 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00495651.)

    A Theory for High-TcT_c Superconductors Considering Inhomogeneous Charge Distribution

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    We propose a general theory for the critical TcT_c and pseudogap TT^* temperature dependence on the doping concentration for high-TcT_c oxides, taking into account the charge inhomogeneities in the CuO2CuO_2 planes. The well measured experimental inhomogeneous charge density in a given compound is assumed to produce a spatial distribution of local ρ(r)\rho(r). These differences in the local charge concentration is assumed to yield insulator and metallic regions, possibly in a stripe morphology. In the metallic region, the inhomogeneous charge density yields also spatial distributions of superconducting critical temperatures Tc(r)T_c(r) and zero temperature gap Δ0(r)\Delta_0(r). For a given sample, the measured onset of vanishing gap temperature is identified as the pseudogap temperature, that is, TT^*, which is the maximum of all Tc(r)T_c(r). Below TT^*, due to the distribution of Tc(r)T_c(r)'s, there are some superconducting regions surrounded by insulator or metallic medium. The transition to a superconducting state corresponds to the percolation threshold among the superconducting regions with different Tc(r)T_c(r)'s. To model the charge inhomogeneities we use a double branched Poisson-Gaussian distribution. To make definite calculations and compare with the experimental results, we derive phase diagrams for the BSCO, LSCO and YBCO families, with a mean field theory for superconductivity using an extended Hubbard Hamiltonian. We show also that this novel approach provides new insights on several experimental features of high-TcT_c oxides.Comment: 7 pages, 5 eps figures, corrected typo

    Stripes, Vibrations and Superconductivity

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    We propose a model of a spatially modulated collective charge state of superconducting cuprates. The regions of higher carrier density (stripes) are described in terms of Luttinger liquids and the regions of lower density as a two-dimensional interacting bosonic gas of d_{x^2-y^2} hole pairs. The interactions among the elementary excitations are repulsive and the transition to the superconducting state is driven by decay processes. Vibrations of the CCS and the lattice, although not participating directly in the binding mechanism, are fundamental for superconductivity. The superfluid density and the lattice have a strong tendency to modulation implying a still unobserved dimerized stripe phase in cuprates. The phase diagram of the model has a crossover from 1D to 2D behavior and a pseudogap region where the amplitude of the order parameters are finite but phase coherence is not established. We discuss the nature of the spin fluctuations and the unusual isotope effect within the model.Comment: 51 pages, 20 figures. Post-March Meeting version: New references are added, some of the typos are corrected, and a few new discussions are include
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