Tuning of the electronic properties of heavy fermion compounds by chemical
substitutions provides excellent opportunities to further understand the
physics of hybridized ions in crystal lattices. Here we present an
investigation on the effects of Cd doping in flux-grown single crystals of the
complex intermetallic cage compound YbFe2Zn20, that has been
described as a heavy fermion with Sommerfeld coefficient of 535 mJ/mol.K2.
Substitution of Cd for Zn disturbs the system by expanding the unit cell and,
in this case, the size of the Zn cages that surround Yb and Fe. With increasing
amount of Cd, the hybridization between Yb 4f electrons and the conduction
electrons is weakened, as evidenced by a decrease in the Sommerfeld
coefficient, which should be accompanied by a valence shift of the Yb3+
due to the negative chemical pressure effect. This scenario is also supported
by the low temperature dc-magnetic susceptibility, that is gradually suppressed
and evidences an increment of the Kondo temperature, based on a shift to higher
temperatures of the characteristic broad susceptibility peak. Furthermore, the
DC resistivity decreases with the isoelectronic Cd substitution for Zn,
contrary to the expectation for an increasingly disordered system, and implying
that the valence shift is not related to charge carrier doping. The combined
results demonstrate excellent complementarity between positive physical
pressure and negative chemical pressure, and point to a rich playground for
exploring the physics and chemistry of strongly correlated electron systems in
the general family of Zn20 compounds, despite their structural complexity.Comment: J. Phys.: Cond. Mat. (accepted