1,559 research outputs found
Angular dependence of the magnetization of isotropic superconductors: which is the vortex direction?
We present studies of the dc magnetization of thin platelike samples of the
isotropic type II superconductor PbTl(10%), as a function of the angle between
the normal to the sample and the applied magnetic field . We determine
the magnetization vector by measuring the components both parallel
and normal to in a SQUID magnetometer, and we further decompose it in
its reversible and irreversible contributions. The behavior of the reversible
magnetization is well understood in terms of minimization of the free energy
taking into account geometrical effects. In the mixed state at low fields, the
dominant effect is the line energy gained by shortening the vortices, thus the
flux lines are almost normal to the sample surface. Due to the geometrical
constrain, the irreversible magnetization remains locked to the
sample normal over a wide range of fields and orientations, as already known.
We show that in order to undestand the angle and field dependence of the
modulus of , which is a measure of the vortex pinning, and to
correctly extract the field dependent critical current density, the knowledge
of the modulus and orientation of the induction field is required.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Magnetic field dependence of charge stripe order in La2-xBaxCuO4 (x~1/8)
We have carried out a detailed investigation of the magnetic field dependence
of charge ordering in La2-xBaxCuO4 (x~1/8) utilizing high-resolution x-ray
scattering. We find that the charge order correlation length increases as the
magnetic field greater than ~5T is applied in the superconducting phase (T=2K).
The observed unusual field dependence of the charge order correlation length
suggests that the static charge stripe order competes with the superconducting
ground state in this sample.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Charge-transfer exciton in La2CuO4 probed with resonant inelastic x-ray scattering
We report a high-resolution resonant inelastic x-ray scattering study of
La2CuO4. A number of spectral features are identified that were not clearly
visible in earlier lower-resolution data. The momentum dependence of the
spectral weight and the dispersion of the lowest energy excitation across the
insulating gap have been measured in detail. The temperature dependence of the
spectral features was also examined. The observed charge transfer edge shift,
along with the low dispersion of the first charge transfer excitation are
attributed to the lattice motion being coupled to the electronic system. In
addition, we observe a dispersionless feature at 1.8 eV, which is associated
with a d-d crystal field excitation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
X-ray induced electronic structure change in CuIrS
The electronic structure of CuIrS has been investigated using various
bulk-sensitive x-ray spectroscopic methods near the Ir -edge: resonant
inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS), x-ray absorption spectroscopy in the partial
fluorescence yield (PFY-XAS) mode, and resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy
(RXES). A strong RIXS signal (0.75 eV) resulting from a charge-density-wave gap
opening is observed below the metal-insulator transition temperature of 230 K.
The resultant modification of electronic structure is consistent with the
density functional theory prediction. In the spin- and charge- dimer disordered
phase induced by x-ray irradiation below 50 K, we find that a broad peak around
0.4 eV appears in the RIXS spectrum.Comment: 4 pages and 4 figure
Properties of charge density waves in LaBaCuO
We report a comprehensive x-ray scattering study of charge density wave
(stripe) ordering in , for which the
superconducting is greatly suppressed. Strong superlattice reflections
corresponding to static ordering of charge stripes were observed in this
sample. The structural modulation at the lowest temperature was deduced based
on the intensity of over 70 unique superlattice positions surveyed. We found
that the charge order in this sample is described with one-dimensional charge
density waves, which have incommensurate wave-vectors (0.23, 0, 0.5) and (0,
0.23, 0.5) respectively on neighboring planes. The structural
modulation due to the charge density wave order is simply sinusoidal, and no
higher harmonics were observed. Just below the structural transition
temperature, short-range charge density wave correlation appears, which
develops into a large scale charge ordering around 40 K, close to the spin
density wave ordering temperature. However, this charge ordering fails to grow
into a true long range order, and its correlation length saturates at , and slightly decreases below about 15 K, which may be due to the onset
of two-dimensional superconductivity.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
d-d Excitations in Bilayer Manganites Probed by Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering
We report a high resolution resonant inelastic x-ray scattering investigation
of the bilayer manganites LaSrMnO with and
. The momentum dependence along the crystallographic direction for
energy losses has been measured in
detail with the data analysis focusing on the energy loss region , which includes a strong peak located at . We observe a clear dispersion of up to in
the measured range, which is direct evidence of the non-local
character of this excitation. Further, we found that the intensity in this low
energy region strongly depends on both the reduced wave vector , , and temperature, i.e. different ordered phases.
Results can be explained via an intersite charge transfer excitation,
proposed for pseudo-cubic manganites, where the hopping rate is strongly
increased (decreased) by ferromagnetic (antiferromagnetic) alignment of
neighboring in-plane Mn ion core spins
Persistent X-Ray Photoconductivity and Percolation of Metallic Clusters in Charge-Ordered Manganites
Charge-ordered manganites of composition exhibit persistent photoconductivity upon
exposure to x-rays. This is not always accompanied by a significant increase in
the {\it number} of conduction electrons as predicted by conventional models of
persistent photoconductivity. An analysis of the x-ray diffraction patterns and
current-voltage characteristics shows that x-ray illumination results in a
microscopically phase separated state in which charge-ordered insulating
regions provide barriers against charge transport between metallic clusters.
The dominant effect of x-ray illumination is to enhance the electron {\it
mobility} by lowering or removing these barriers. A mechanism based on magnetic
degrees of freedom is proposed.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Charge and orbital excitations in Li2CuO2
We report a resonant inelastic x-ray scattering study of electronic
excitations in Li_2CuO_2, an insulating compound comprised of ribbons of
edge-sharing copper-oxygen chains. Three excitations, which show little
dependence on momentum transfer, are observed in our measurements. The lowest
energy excitation at ~2.1 eV is dispersionless and is attributed to a localized
d-d orbital excitation. We also observe two excitations at ~5.4 eV and ~7.6 eV
which we assign to charge-transfer excitations. These high-energy excitations
are also dispersionless along the copper-oxygen chain direction. However, in
each case we observe a small energy dispersion along the direction
perpendicular to the copper-oxygen ribbons, suggesting a significant interchain
coupling in this system. We also discuss the possible implications of
ferromagnetic nearest-neighbor intrachain coupling on the charge excitation
spectra.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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