33 research outputs found
High temperature superconductors
The two principle objectives are to develop materials that superconduct at higher temperatures and to better understand the mechanisms behind high temperature superconductivity. Experiments on the thermal reaction, structure, and physical properties of materials that exhibit superconductivity at high temperatures are discussed
Simultaneous measurement of pressure evolution of crystal structure and superconductivity in FeSe0.92 using designer diamonds
Simultaneous high pressure x-ray diffraction and electrical resistance
measurements have been carried out on a PbO type {\alpha}-FeSe0.92 compound to
a pressure of 44 GPa and temperatures down to 4 K using designer diamond anvils
at synchrotron source. At ambient temperature, a structural phase transition
from a tetragonal (P4/nmm) phase to an orthorhombic (Pbnm) phase is observed at
11 GPa and the Pbnm phase persists up to 74 GPa. The superconducting transition
temperature (TC) increases rapidly with pressure reaching a maximum of ~28 K at
~ 6 GPa and decreases at higher pressures, disappearing completely at 14.6 GPa.
Simultaneous pressure-dependent x-ray diffraction and resistance measurements
at low temperatures show superconductivity only in a low pressure orthorhombic
(Cmma) phase of the {\alpha}-FeSe0.92. Upon increasing pressure at 10 K near
TC, crystalline phases change from a mixture of orthorhombic (Cmma) and
hexagonal (P63/mmc) to a high pressure orthorhombic (Pbnm) phase near 6.4 GPa
where TC is maximum.Comment: 6 figures, 6 pages, Subjects: Superconductivity and Condensed matter
(structural, mechanical & thermal
Disordered Fe vacancies and superconductivity in potassium-intercalated iron selenide (K2-xFe4+ySe5)
The parent compound of an unconventional superconductor must contain unusual
correlated electronic and magnetic properties of its own. In the high-Tc
potassium intercalated FeSe, there has been significant debate regarding what
the exact parent compound is. Our studies unambiguously show that the
Fe-vacancy ordered K2Fe4Se5 is the magnetic, Mott insulating parent compound of
the superconducting state. Non-superconducting K2Fe4Se5 becomes a
superconductor after high temperature annealing, and the overall picture
indicates that superconductivity in K2-xFe4+ySe5 originates from the Fe-vacancy
order to disorder transition. Thus, the long pending question whether magnetic
and superconducting state are competing or cooperating for cuprate
superconductors may also apply to the Fe-chalcogenide superconductors. It is
believed that the iron selenides and related compounds will provide essential
information to understand the origin of superconductivity in the iron-based
superconductors, and possibly to the superconducting cuprates
First-order magnetic and structural phase transitions in FeSeTe
We use bulk magnetic susceptibility, electronic specific heat, and neutron
scattering to study structural and magnetic phase transitions in FeSe%
Te. FeTe exhibits a first order phase transition near 67
K with a tetragonal to monoclinic structural transition and simultaneously
develops a collinear antiferromagnetic (AF) order responsible for the entropy
change across the transition. Systematic studies of FeSeTe system
reveal that the AF structure and lattice distortion in these materials are
different from those of FeAs-based pnictides. These results call into question
the conclusions of present density functional calculations, where
FeSeTe and FeAs-based pnictides are expected to have similar Fermi
surfaces and therefore the same spin-density-wave AF order.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure