1,309 research outputs found
Effects of metallic spacer in layered superconducting Sr2(MgTi)O3FeAs
The highly two-dimensional superconducting system
Sr2(MgTi)O3FeAs, recently synthesized in the range of 0.2 < y <
0.5, shows an Mg concentration-dependent . Reducing the Mg concentration
from y=0.5 leads to a sudden increase in , with a maximum ~40 K at
y=0.2. Using first principles calculations, the unsynthesized stoichiometric
y=0 and the substoichiometric y=0.5 compounds have been investigated. For the
50% Mg-doped phase (y=0.5), Sr2(MgTi)O3 layers are completely
insulating spacers between FeAs layers, leading to the fermiology such as that
found for other Fe pnictides. At y=0, representing a phase with metallic
Sr2TiO3 layers, the -centered Fe-derived Fermi surfaces (FSs)
considerably shrink or disappear. Instead, three -centered Ti FSs
appear, and in particular two of them have similar size, like in MgB2.
Interestingly, FSs have very low Fermi velocity in large fractions: the lowest
being 0.6 cm/s. Furthermore, our fixed spin moment calculations
suggest the possibility of magnetic ordering, with magnetic Ti and nearly
nonmagnetic Fe ions. These results indicate a crucial role of
Sr2(MgTi)O3 layers in this superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages; Proceedings of ICSM-201
Spin-memory loss at Co/Ru interfaces
We have determined the spin-memory-loss parameter, , by
measuring the transmission of spin-triplet and spin-singlet Cooper pairs across
Co/Ru interfaces in Josephson junctions and by Current-Perpendicular-to-Plane
Giant Magnetoresistance (CPP-GMR) techniques. The probability of spin-memory
loss at the Co/Ru interface is . From the CPP-MR, we
obtain that is in good agreement with
obtained from spin-triplet transmission. For
spin-singlet transmission, we have that is
different from that obtained from CPP-GMR and spin-triplet transmission. The
source of this difference is not understood.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Infinite Layer LaNiO(2): Ni(1+)is not Cu(2+)
The Ni ion in LaNiO has the same formal ionic configuration as
does Cu in isostructural CaCuO, but it is reported to be nonmagnetic and
probably metallic whereas CaCuO is a magnetic insulator. From ab initio
calculations we trace its individualistic behavior to (1) reduced
mixing due to an increase of the separation of site energies () of at least 2 eV, and (2) important Ni mixing with
La states that leads to Fermi surface pockets of La
character that hole-dope the Ni 3d band.Correlation effects do not appear to be
large in LaNiO. However, ad hoc increase of the intraatomic repulsion on
the Ni site (using the LDA+U method) is found to lead to a novel correlated
state: (i) the transition metal and states undergo
consecutive Mott transitions, (ii) their moments are antialigned leading
(ideally) to a "singlet" ion in which there are two polarized orbitals, and
(iii) mixing of the upper Hubbard band with the La
states leaves considerable transition metal 3d character in a band pinned to
the Fermi level. The magnetic configuration is more indicative of a Ni
ion in this limit, although the actual charge changes little with U.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Evidence for incommensurate spin fluctuations in Sr_2RuO_4
We report first inelastic neutron scattering measurements in the normal state
of Sr_2RuO_4 that reveal the existence of incommensurate magnetic spin
fluctuations located at . This
finding confirms recent band structure calculations that have predicted
incommensurate magnetic responses related to dynamical nesting properties of
its Fermi surface
Searching for bosons decaying to gluons
The production and decay of a new heavy vector boson, a chromophilic
vector boson, is described. The chromophilic couples only to two gluons,
but its two-body decays are absent, leading to a dominant decay mode of
. The unusual nature of the interaction predicts a
cross-section which grows with for a fixed coupling and an
accompanying gluon with a coupling that rises with its energy. We study the
decay mode, proposing distinct reconstruction techniques for the
observation of an excess and for the measurement of . We estimate the
sensitivity of current experimental datasets.Comment: For submission to PR
Structural origin of the anomalous temperature dependence of the local magnetic moments in the CaFeAs family of materials
We report a combination of Fe K x-ray emission spectroscopy and
-intio calculations to investigate the correlation between structural and
magnetic degrees of freedom in CaFe(AsP). The
puzzling temperature behavior of the local moment found in rare earth-doped
CaFeAs [\textit{H. Gretarsson, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 110},
047003 (2013)}] is also observed in CaFe(AsP). We
explain this phenomenon based on first-principles calculations with scaled
magnetic interaction. One scaling parameter is sufficient to describe
quantitatively the magnetic moments in both CaFe(AsP) () and CaLaFeAs at all
temperatures. The anomalous growth of the local moments with increasing
temperature can be understood from the observed large thermal expansion of the
-axis lattice parameter combined with strong magnetoelastic coupling. These
effects originate from the strong tendency to form As-As dimers across the Ca
layer in the CaFeAs family of materials. Our results emphasize the
dual local-itinerant character of magnetism in Fe pnictides
The Unusual Superconducting State at 49 K in Electron-Doped CaFe2As2 at Ambient
We report the detection of unusual superconductivity up to 49 K in single
crystalline CaFe2As2 via electron-doping by partial replacement of Ca by
rare-earth. The superconducting transition observed suggests the possible
existence of two phases: one starting at ~ 49 K, which has a low critical field
~ 4 Oe, and the other at ~ 21 K, with a much higher critical field > 5 T. Our
observations are in strong contrast to previous reports of doping or
pressurizing layered compounds AeFe2As2 (or Ae122), where Ae = Ca, Sr or Ba. In
Ae122, hole-doping has been previously observed to generate superconductivity
with a transition temperature (Tc) only up to 38 K and pressurization has been
reported to produce superconductivity with a Tc up to 30 K. The unusual 49 K
phase detected will be discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Nonlocality of Kohn-Sham exchange-correlation fields in dielectrics
The theory of the macroscopic field appearing in the Kohn-Sham
exchange-correlation potential for dielectric materials, as introduced by
Gonze, Ghosez and Godby, is reexamined. It is shown that this Kohn-Sham field
cannot be determined from a knowledge of the local state of the material (local
crystal potential, electric field, and polarization) alone. Instead, it has an
intrinsically nonlocal dependence on the global electrostatic configuration.
For example, it vanishes in simple transverse configurations of a polarized
dielectric, but not in longitudinal ones.Comment: 4 pages, two-column style with 2 postscript figures embedded. Uses
REVTEX and epsf macros. Also available at
http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~dhv/preprints/index.html#dv_gg
Optical Pulse-Phased Photopolarimetry of PSR B0656+14
We have observed the optical pulse profile of PSR B0656+14 in 10 phase bins
at a high signal-to-noise ratio, and have measured the linear polarization
profile over 30% of the pulsar period with some significance. The pulse profile
is double-peaked, with a bridge of emission between the two peaks, similar to
gamma-ray profiles observed in other pulsars. There is no detectable unpulsed
flux, to a 1-sigma limit of 16% of the pulse-averaged flux. The emission in the
bridge is highly (~ 100%) polarized, with a position angle sweep in excellent
agreement with the prediction of the Rotating Vector Model as determined from
radio polarization observations. We are able to account for the gross features
of the optical light curve (i.e., the phase separation of the peaks) using both
polar cap and outer gap models. Using the polar cap model, we are also able to
estimate the height of the optical emission regions.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, accepted by ApJ (scheduled v597 n2, November
10, 2003
- …