597 research outputs found

    Spinon Phonon Interaction and Ultrasonic Attenuation in Quantum Spin Liquids

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    Several experimental candidates for quantum spin liquids have been discovered in the past few years which appear to support gapless fermionic S=12S = {1\over 2} excitations called spinons. The spinons may form a Fermi sea coupled to a U(1)U(1) gauge field, and may undergo a pairing instability. We show that despite being charge neutral, the spinons couple to phonons in exactly the same way that electrons do in the long wavelength limit. Therefore we can use sound attenuation to measure the spinon mass and lifetime. Furthermore, transverse ultrasonic attenuation is a direct probe of the onset of pairing because the Meissner effect of the gauge field causes a "rapid fall" of the attenuation at TcT_c in addition to the reduction due to the opening of the energy gap. This phenomenon, well known in clean superconductors, may reveal the existence of the U(1) gauge field.Comment: 4+epsilon pages of main text + 12 pages of supplementary materia

    Low-TT Phononic Thermal Conductivity in Superconductors with Line Nodes

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    The phonon contribution to the thermal conductivity at low temperature in superconductors with line nodes is calculated assuming that scattering by both nodal quasiparticles and the sample boundaries is significant. It is determined that, within the regime in which the quasiparticles are in the universal limit and the phonon attenuation is in the hydrodynamic limit, there exists a wide temperature range over which the phonon thermal conductivity varies as T2T^2. This behaviour comes from the fact that transverse phonons propagating along certain directions do not interact with nodal quasiparticles and is thus found to be required by the symmetry of the crystal and the superconducting gap, independent of the model used for the electron-phonon interaction. The T2T^2-dependence of the phonon thermal conductivity occurs over a well-defined intermediate temperature range: at higher TT the temperature-dependence is found to be linear while at lower TT the usual T3T^3 (boundary-limited) behaviour is recovered. Results are compared to recent measurements of the thermal conductivity of Tl2201, and are shown to be consistent with the data.Comment: 4 page

    An analytical treatment of in-plane magnetotransport in the Falicov-Sievert model

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    We derive an analytical expression which allows efficient computation of the effect of all the Fermi surface trajectories induced by a combination of Bragg scattering and magnetic breakdown on the in-plane components of the resistivity tensor. The particular network of coupled orbits which we consider was first formulated by Falicov and Sievert, who studied the problem numerically. Our approach, based upon a method used previously to derive an analytical solution for interlayer transport, allows us to show that the conductivity tensor can be written as a sum of a matrix representing the effect of total magnetic breakdown and one representing a combination of complex electronic trajectories, and we find a compact expression for the in-plane components of the resistivity tensor that can be evaluated straightforwardly.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Intervalley-Scattering Induced Electron-Phonon Energy Relaxation in Many-Valley Semiconductors at Low Temperatures

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    We report on the effect of elastic intervalley scattering on the energy transport between electrons and phonons in many-valley semiconductors. We derive a general expression for the electron-phonon energy flow rate at the limit where elastic intervalley scattering dominates over diffusion. Electron heating experiments on heavily doped n-type Si samples with electron concentration in the range 3.5−16.0×10253.5-16.0\times 10^{25} m−3^{-3} are performed at sub-1 K temperatures. We find a good agreement between the theory and the experiment.Comment: v2: Notations changed: Δi\Delta_i --> δvi\delta v_i, τeff\tau_{eff} removed. Eq. (1) changed, Eq. (2) added and complete derivation of Eq. (3) included. Some further discussion about single vs. many valley added [3rd paragraph after Eq. (7)]. End notes removed and new reference added [Kragler and Thomas]. Typos in references correcte

    The effect of Aharanov-Bohm phase on the magnetic-field dependence of two-pulse echos in glasses at low temperatures

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    The anomalous response of glasses in the echo amplitude experiment is explained in the presence of a magnetic field. We have considered the low energy excitations in terms of an effective two level system. The effective model is constructed on the flip-flop configuration of two interacting two level systems. The magnetic field affects the tunneling amplitude through the Aharanov-Bohm effect. The effective model has a lower scale of energy in addition to the new distribution of tunneling parameters which depend on the interaction. We are able to explain some features of echo amplitude versus a magnetic field, namely, the dephasing effect at low magnetic fields, dependence on the strength of the electric field, pulse separation effect and the influence of temperature. However this model fails to explain the isotope effects which essentially can be explained by the nuclear quadrupole moment. We will finally discuss the features of our results.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Breakdown of weak-field magnetotransport at a metallic quantum critical point

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    We show how the collapse of an energy scale in a quantum critical metal can lead to physics beyond the weak-field limit usually used to compute transport quantities. For a density-wave transition we show that the presence of a finite magnetic field at the critical point leads to discontinuities in the transport coefficients as temperature tends to zero. The origin of these discontinuities lies in the breakdown of the weak field Jones-Zener expansion which has previously been used to argue that magneto-transport coefficients are continuous at simple quantum critical points. The presence of potential scattering and magnetic breakdown rounds the discontinuities over a window determined by tau Delta < 1 where Delta is the order parameter and tau is the quasiparticle elastic lifetime.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures RevTeX forma

    Clausius inequality and optimality of quasi static transformations for nonequilibrium stationary states

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    Nonequilibrium stationary states of thermodynamic systems dissipate a positive amount of energy per unit of time. If we consider transformations of such states that are realized by letting the driving depend on time, the amount of energy dissipated in an unbounded time window becomes then infinite. Following the general proposal by Oono and Paniconi and using results of the macroscopic fluctuation theory, we give a natural definition of a renormalized work performed along any given transformation. We then show that the renormalized work satisfies a Clausius inequality and prove that equality is achieved for very slow transformations, that is in the quasi static limit. We finally connect the renormalized work to the quasi potential of the macroscopic fluctuation theory, that gives the probability of fluctuations in the stationary nonequilibrium ensemble

    Multiorbital effects on the transport and the superconducting fluctuations in LiFeAs

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    The resistivity, Hall effect and transverse magnetoresistance (MR) have been measured in low residual resistivity single crystals of LiFeAs. A comparison with angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy and quantum oscillation data implies that four carrier bands unevenly contribute to the transport. However the scattering rates of the carriers all display the T^2 behavior expected for a Fermi liquid. Near Tc low field deviations of the MR with respect to a H^2 variation permit us to extract the superconducting fluctuation contribution to the conductivity. Though below Tc the anisotropy of superconductivity is rather small, the superconducting fluctuations display a quasi ideal two-dimensional behavior which persists up to 1.4 Tc. These results call for a refined theoretical understanding of the multiband behavior of superconductivity in this pnictide.Comment: 8pages with supplementary material, 6 figure

    Analytical treatment of the dHvA frequency combinations due to chemical potential oscillations in an idealized two-band Fermi liquid

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    de Haas-van Alphen oscillation spectrum is studied for an idealized two-dimensional Fermi liquid with two parabolic bands in the case of canonical (fixed number of quasiparticles) and grand canonical (fixed chemical potential) ensembles. As already reported in the literature, oscillations of the chemical potential in magnetic field yield frequency combinations that are forbidden in the framework of the semiclassical theory. Exact analytical calculation of the Fourier components is derived at zero temperature and an asymptotic expansion is given for the high temperature and low magnetic field range. A good agreement is obtained between analytical formulae and numerical computations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure

    Weak- to strong pinning crossover

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    Material defects in hard type II superconductors pin the flux lines and thus establish the dissipation-free current transport in the presence of a finite magnetic field. Depending on the density and pinning force of the defects and the vortex density, pinning is either weak-collective or strong. We analyze the weak- to strong pinning crossover of vortex matter in disordered superconductors and discuss the peak effect appearing naturally in this context.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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