585 research outputs found
Hall coefficient and Hc2 in underdoped LaFeAsO0.95F0.05
The electrical resistivity and Hall coefficient of LaFeAsO0.95F0.05
polycrystalline samples were measured in pulsed magnetic fields up to m0H = 60
T from room temperature to 1.5 K. The resistance of the normal state shows a
negative temperature coefficient (dr/dT < 0) below 70 K for this composition,
indicating insulating ground state in underdoped LaFeAsO system in contrast to
heavily doped compound. The charge carrier density obtained from Hall effect
can be described as constant plus a thermally activated term with an energy gap
DE = 630 K. Upper critical field, Hc2, estimated from resistivity measurements,
exceeds 75 T with zero-field Tc = 26.3 K, suggesting an unconventional nature
for superconductivity.Comment: 12 pages and 4 figure
Radio Frequency Electrical Resistance Measurement under Destructive Pulsed Magnetic Fields
We developed a resistance measurement using radio frequency reflection to
investigate the electrical transport characteristics under destructive pulsed
magnetic fields above 100 T. A homemade flexible printed circuit for a sample
stage reduced the noise caused by the induced voltage from the pulsed magnetic
fields, improving the accuracy of the measurements of the reflected waves. From
the obtained reflectance data, the absolute value of the magnetoresistance was
successfully determined by using a phase analysis with admittance charts. These
developments enable more accurate and comprehensive measurements of electrical
resistance in pulsed magnetic fields.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Upper critical field and thermally activated flux flow in single crystalline TlRbFeSe
The upper critical field of
TlRbFeSe single crystals has been determined by
means of measuring the electrical resistivity in both a pulsed magnetic field
(60T) and a DC magnetic field (14T). It is found that
linearly increases with decreasing temperature for ,
reaching T. On the
other hand, a larger with a strong convex curvature
is observed for ((18K)60T). This compound shows a moderate anisotropy of the upper
critical field around , but decreases with decreasing temperature.
Analysis of the upper critical field based on the Werthamer-Helfand-Hohenberg
(WHH) method indicates that is orbitally limited for
, but the effect of spin paramagnetism may play an
important role on the pair breaking for . All these
experimental observations remarkably resemble those of the iron pnictide
superconductors, suggesting a unified scenario for the iron-based
superconductors. Moreover, the superconducting transition is significantly
broadened upon applying a magnetic field, indicating strong thermal fluctuation
effects in the superconducting state of
TlRbFeSe. The derived thermal activation energy
for vortex motion is compatible with those of the 1111-type iron pnictides.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
A Start-Timing Detector for the Collider Experiment PHENIX at RHIC-BNL
We describe a start-timing detector for the PHENIX experiment at the
relativistic heavy-ion collider RHIC. The role of the detector is to detect a
nuclear collision, provide precise time information with an accuracy of 50ps,
and determine the collision point along the beam direction with a resolution of
a few cm. Technical challenges are that the detector must be operational in a
wide particle-multiplicity range in a high radiation environment and a strong
magnetic field. We present the performance of the prototype and discuss the
final design of the detector.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, 9 gif and 4 ps figures. Submitted to NIM
Weak anisotropy of the superconducting upper critical field in Fe1.11Te0.6Se0.4 single crystals
We have determined the resistive upper critical field Hc2 for single crystals
of the superconductor Fe1.11Te0.6Se0.4 using pulsed magnetic fields of up to
60T. A rather high zero-temperature upper critical field of mu0Hc2(0) approx
47T is obtained, in spite of the relatively low superconducting transition
temperature (Tc approx 14K). Moreover, Hc2 follows an unusual temperature
dependence, becoming almost independent of the magnetic field orientation as
the temperature T=0. We suggest that the isotropic superconductivity in
Fe1.11Te0.6Se0.4 is a consequence of its three-dimensional Fermi-surface
topology. An analogous result was obtained for (Ba,K)Fe2As2, indicating that
all layered iron-based superconductors exhibit generic behavior that is
significantly different from that of the high-Tc cuprates.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submit to PR
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