We present measurements of the resistivity ρx,x of URu2Si2
high-quality single crystals in pulsed high magnetic fields up to 81~T at a
temperature of 1.4~K and up to 60~T at temperatures down to 100~mK. For a field
\textbf{H} applied along the magnetic easy-axis \textbf{c}, a strong
sample-dependence of the low-temperature resistivity in the hidden-order phase
is attributed to a high carrier mobility. The interplay between the magnetic
and orbital properties is emphasized by the angle-dependence of the phase
diagram, where magnetic transition fields and crossover fields related to the
Fermi surface properties follow a 1/cosθ-law, θ being the angle
between \textbf{H} and \textbf{c}. For H∥c, a
crossover defined at a kink of ρx,x, as initially reported in [Shishido
et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{102}, 156403 (2009)], is found to be strongly
sample-dependent: its characteristic field μ0H∗ varies from ≃20~T
in our best sample with a residual resistivity ratio RRR of 225 to
≃25~T in a sample with a RRR of 90. A second crossover is defined at
the maximum of ρx,x at the sample-independent characteristic field
μ0Hρ,maxLT≃30~T. Fourier analyzes of SdH oscillations show
that Hρ,maxLT coincides with a sudden modification of the Fermi
surface, while H∗ lies in a regime where the Fermi surface is smoothly
modified. For H∥a, i) no phase transition is
observed at low temperature and the system remains in the hidden-order phase up
to 81~T, ii) quantum oscillations surviving up to 7~K are related to a new and
almost-spherical orbit - for the first time observed here - at the frequency
Fλ≃1400~T and associated with a low effective mass
mλ∗=(1±0.5)⋅m0, and iii) no Fermi surface modification occurs
up to 81~T.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure