589 research outputs found

    Spin Dynamics at the Mott Transition and in the Metallic State of the Cs_{3}C_{60} Superconducting Phases

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    We present here ^{13}C and ^{133}Cs NMR spin lattice relaxation T_{1} data in the A15 and fcc-Cs_{3}C_{60} phases for increasing hydrostatic pressure through the transition at p_{c} from a Mott insulator to a superconductor. We evidence that for p>> p_{c} the (T_{1}T)^{-1} data above T_{c} display metallic like Korringa constant values which match quantitatively previous data taken on other A_{3}C_{60} compounds. However below the pressure for which T_{c} goes through a maximum, (T_{1}T)^{-1} is markedly increased with respect to the Korringa values expected in a simple BCS scenario. This points out the importance of electronic correlations near the Mott transition. For p > p_{c} singular T dependences of (T_{1}T)^{-1} are detected for T >> T_{c}. It will be shown that they can be ascribed to a large variation with temperature of the Mott transition pressure p_{c} towards a liquid-gas like critical point, as found at high T for usual Mott transitions.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, submitted to EP

    Superconducting fluctuations and pseudogap in high-Tc cuprates

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    Large pulsed magnetic fields up to 60 Tesla are used to suppress the contribution of superconducting fluctuations (SCF) to the ab-plane conductivity above Tc in a series of YBa2Cu3O(6+x). These experiments allow us to determine the field H'c(T) and the temperature T'c above which the SCFs are fully suppressed. A careful investigation near optimal doping shows that T'c is higher than the pseudogap temperature T*, which is an unambiguous evidence that the pseudogap cannot be assigned to preformed pairs. Accurate determinations of the SCF contribution to the conductivity versus temperature and magnetic field have been achieved. They can be accounted for by thermal fluctuations following the Ginzburg-Landau scheme for nearly optimally doped samples. A phase fluctuation contribution might be invoked for the most underdoped samples in a T range which increases when controlled disorder is introduced by electron irradiation. Quantitative analysis of the fluctuating magnetoconductance allows us to determine the critical field Hc2(0) which is found to be be quite similar to H'c(0) and to increase with hole doping. Studies of the incidence of disorder on both T'c and T* allow us to propose a three dimensional phase diagram including a disorder axis, which allows to explain most observations done in other cuprate families.Comment: Paper presented at the "Eurasia-Pacific Summer School & Conference on Correlated Electrons", Turunc-Marmaris, Turkey, July 4-14, 201

    Disorder, Metal-Insulator crossover and Phase diagram in high-Tc cuprates

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    We have studied the influence of disorder induced by electron irradiation on the normal state resistivities ρ(T)\rho(T) of optimally and underdoped YBa2CuOx single crystals, using pulsed magnetic fields up to 60T to completely restore the normal state. We evidence that point defect disorder induces low T upturns of rho(T) which saturate in some cases at low T in large applied fields as would be expected for a Kondo-like magnetic response. Moreover the magnitude of the upturns is related to the residual resistivity, that is to the concentration of defects and/or their nanoscale morphology. These upturns are found quantitatively identical to those reported in lower Tc cuprates, which establishes the importance of disorder in these supposedly pure compounds. We therefore propose a realistic phase diagram of the cuprates, including disorder, in which the superconducting state might reach the antiferromagnetic phase in the clean limit.Comment: version 2 with minor change

    59Co NMR evidence for charge and orbital order in the kagome like structure of Na2/3CoO2

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    We report a complete set of 59^{59}Co NMR data taken on the x=2/3x=2/3 phase of sodium cobaltates Nax_{x}CoO2_{2}, for which we have formerly established the in plane Na ordering and its three dimensional stacking from a combination of symmetry arguments taken from Na and Co NQR/NMR data. Here we resolve all the parameters of the Zeeman and quadrupolar Hamiltonians for all cobalt sites in the unit cell and report the temperature dependencies of the NMR shift and spin lattice relaxation T1T_{1} data for these sites. We confirm that three non-magnetic Co3+^{3+} (Co1) are in axially symmetric positions and that the doped holes are delocalized on the nine complementary magnetic cobalt sites (Co2) of the atomic unit cell. The moderately complicated atomic structure resumes then in a very simple electronic structure in which the electrons delocalize on the Co2 kagom\'e sublattice of the triangular lattice of Co sites. The observation of a single temperature dependence of the spin susceptibilities indicates that a single band picture applies, and that the magnetic properties are dominated by the static and dynamic electronic properties at the Co2 sites. We evidence that they display a strong in plane electronic anisotropy initially unexpected but which accords perfectly with an orbital ordering along the kagom\'e sublattice organization. These detailed data should now permit realistic calculations of the electronic properties of this compound in order to determine the incidence of electronic correlations.Comment: 20 pages, 15 figures, 3 tables, published in Phys. Rev. B, added new Appendix

    Mechanical detection of nuclear spin relaxation in a micron-size crystal

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    A room temperature nuclear magnetic resonance force microscope (MRFM), fitted in a 1^1Tesla electromagnet, is used to measure the nuclear spin relaxation of 1^1H in a micron-size (70ng) crystal of ammonium sulfate. NMR sequences, combining both pulsed and continuous wave r.f. fields, have allowed us to measure mechanically T2T_2 and T1T_1, the transverse and longitudinal spin relaxation times. Because two spin species with different T1T_1 values are measured in our 7μm7\mu{\rm m} thick crystal, magnetic resonance imaging of their spatial distribution inside the sample section are performed. To understand quantitatively the measured signal, we carefully study the influence of the spin-lattice relaxation and the non-adiabaticity of the c.w. sequence on the intensity and time dependence of the detected signal.Comment: latex drafteps.tex, 13 files, 12 pages [SPEC-S00/010], submitted to Eur. Phys. J.

    Reply to Comment on "High-field studies of superconducting fluctuations in high-Tc cuprates: Evidence for a small gap distinct from the large pseudogap" by M.V. Ramallo et al

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    The experimental investigations done in our paper Phys.Rev.B84,014522(2011) allowed us to establish that the superconducting fluctuations (SCF) always die out sharply with increasing T. But contrary to the claim done in the comment of Ramallo et al., this sharp cutoff of SCF measured in YBa2Cu3O{6+x} depends on hole doping and/or disorder. So our data cannot be used to claim for a universality of the extended gaussian Ginzburg Landau theory proposed by the authors of the comment. Furthermore, to explain quantitatively our data near optimal doping using this model they need to consider that fluctuations in the two CuO2 planes of a bilayer are totally decoupled, which is not physically well justified. On the contrary a consistent interpretation of all our data (paraconductivity, Nernst effect and magnetoresistance) has been done by considering that the coupling between the two layers of the unit cell is dominant at least up to 1.1Tc.Comment: Reply to the comment published in Phys. Rev. B 85,106501 (2012
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