The optical properties of the heavy-fermion compound UPd2Al3 have been
measured in the frequency range from 0.04 meV to 5 meV (0.3 to 40 cm−1) at
temperatures 2K<T<300 K. Below the coherence temperature T∗≈50 K, the hybridization gap opens around 10 meV. As the temperature decreases
further (T≤20 K), a well pronounced pseudogap of approximately 0.2 meV
develops in the optical response; we relate this to the antiferromagnetic
ordering which occurs below TN≈14 K. The frequency dependent mass and
scattering rate give evidence that the enhancement of the effective mass mainly
occurs below the energy which is associated to the magnetic correlations
between the itinerant and localized 5f electrons. In addition to this
correlation gap, we observe a narrow zero-frequency conductivity peak which at
2 K is less than 0.1 meV wide, and which contains only a fraction of the
delocalized carriers. The analysis of the spectral weight infers a loss of
kinetic energy associated with the superconducting transition.Comment: RevTex, 15 pages, 7 figure