106 research outputs found
Strain enhancement of superconductivity in CePd2Si2 under pressure
We report resistivity and calorimetric measurements on two single crystals of
CePd2Si2 pressurized up to 7.4 GPa. A weak uniaxial stress induced in the
pressure cell demonstrates the sensitivity of the physics to anisotropy. Stress
applied along the c-axis extends the whole phase diagram to higher pressures
and enhances the superconducting phase emerging around the magnetic
instability, with a 40% increase of the maximum superconducting temperature,
Tc, and a doubled pressure range. Calorimetric measurements demonstrate the
bulk nature of the superconductivity.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Specific heat of heavy fermion CePd2Si2 in high magnetic fields
We report specific heat measurements on the heavy fermion compound CePd2Si2
in magnetic fields up to 16 T and in the temperature range 1.4-16 K. A sharp
peak in the specific heat signals the antiferromagnetic transition at T_N ~ 9.3
K in zero field. The transition is found to shift to lower temperatures when a
magnetic field is applied along the crystallographic a-axis, while a field
applied parallel to the tetragonal c-axis does not affect the transition. The
magnetic contribution to the specific heat below T_N is well described by a sum
of a linear electronic term and an antiferromagnetic spin wave contribution.
Just below T_N, an additional positive curvature, especially at high fields,
arises most probably due to thermal fluctuations. The field dependence of the
coefficient of the low temperature linear term, gamma_0, extracted from the
fits shows a maximum at about 6 T, at the point where an anomaly was detected
in susceptibility measurements. The relative field dependence of both T_N and
the magnetic entropy at T_N scales as [1-(B/B_0)^2] for B // a, suggesting the
disappearance of antiferromagnetism at B_0 ~ 42 T. The expected suppression of
the antiferromagnetic transition temperature to zero makes the existence of a
magnetic quantum critical point possible.Comment: to be published in Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
Valence fluctuation mediated superconductivity in CeCu2Si2
It has been proposed that there are two types of superconductivity in
CeCu2Si2, mediated by spin fluctuations at ambient pressure, and by critical
valence fluctuations around a charge instability at a pressure P_v \simeq 4.5
GPa. We present in detail some of the unusual features of this novel type of
superconducting state, including the coexistence of superconductivity and huge
residual resistivity of the order of the Ioffe-Regel limit, large and pressure
dependent resistive transition widths in a single crystal measured under
hydrostatic conditions, asymmetric pressure dependence of the specific heat
jump shape, unrelated to the resistivity width, and negative temperature
dependence of the normal state resistivity below 10 K at very high pressure.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; Proceedings SCES '0
Quasi-two-dimensional Fermi surfaces of the heavy-fermion superconductor CePdIn
We report low-temperature de Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) effect measurements in
magnetic fields up to 35 T of the heavy-fermion superconductor CePdIn.
The comparison of the experimental results with band-structure calculations
implies that the 4 electrons are itinerant rather than localized. The
cyclotron masses estimated at high field are only moderately enhanced, 8 and 14
, but are substantially larger than the corresponding band masses. The
observed angular dependence of the dHvA frequencies suggests
quasi-two-dimensional Fermi surfaces in agreement with band-structure
calculations. However, the deviation from ideal two dimensionality is larger
than in CeCoIn, with which CePdIn bears a lot of similarities. This
subtle distinction accounts for the different superconducting critical
temperatures of the two compounds.Comment: accepted to Phys. Rev.
Superconducting energy gap in MgCNi3 single crystals: Point-contact spectroscopy and specific-heat measurements
Specific heat has been measured down to 600 mK and up to 8 Tesla by the
highly sensitive AC microcalorimetry on the MgCNi3 single crystals with Tc ~ 7
K. Exponential decay of the electronic specific heat at low temperatures proved
that a superconducting energy gap is fully open on the whole Fermi surface, in
agreement with our previous magnetic penetration depth measurements on the same
crystals. The specific-heat data analysis shows consistently the strong
coupling strength 2D/kTc ~ 4. This scenario is supported by the direct gap
measurements via the point-contact spectroscopy. Moreover, the spectroscopy
measurements show a decrease in the critical temperature at the sample surface
accounting for the observed differences of the superfluid density deduced from
the measurements by different techniques
Calorimetric Evidence for a Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov Superconducting State in the Layered Organic Superconductor \kappa_2_2$
The specific heat of the layered organic superconductor -%
(BEDT-TTF)Cu(NCS), where BEDT-TTF is bisethylenedithio-%
tetrathiafulvalene, has been studied in magnetic fields up to 28 T applied
perpendicular and parallel to the superconducting layers. In parallel fields
above 21 T, the superconducting transition becomes first order, which signals
that the Pauli-limiting field is reached. Instead of saturating at this field
value, the upper critical field increases sharply and a second first-order
transition line appears within the superconducting phase. Our results give
strong evidence that the phase, which separates the homogeneous superconducting
state from the normal state is a realization of a
Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov state.Comment: 4pages, 3 figure
The Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov State in the Organic Superconductor k-(BEDT-TTF)2Cu(NCS)2 as Observed in Magnetic Torque Experiments
We present magnetic-torque experiments on the organic superconductor
k-(BEDT-TTF)2Cu(NCS)2 for magnetic fields applied parallel to the 2D
superconducting layers. The experiments show a crossover from a second-order to
a first-order transition when the upper critical field reaches 21 T. Beyond
this field, which we interpret as the Pauli limit for superconductivity, the
upper critical field line shows a pro-nounced upturn and a phase transition
line separates the superconducting state into a low- and a high-field phase. We
interpret the data in the framework of a Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov
state.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figur
Calorimetric and transport investigations of CePd_{2+x}Ge_{2-x} (x=0 and 0.02) up to 22 GPa
The influence of pressure on the magnetically ordered CePd_{2.02}Ge_{1.98}
has been investigated by a combined measurement of electrical resistivity,
, and ac-calorimetry, C(T), for temperatures in the range 0.3 K<T<10 K
and pressures, p, up to 22 GPa. Simultaneously CePd_2Ge_2 has been examined by
down to 40 mK. In CePd_{2.02}Ge_{1.98} and CePd_2Ge_2 the magnetic
order is suppressed at a critical pressure p_c=11.0 GPa and p_c=13.8 GPa,
respectively. In the case of CePd_{2.02}Ge_{1.98} not only the temperature
coefficient of , A, indicates the loss of magnetic order but also the
ac-signal recorded at low temperature. The residual
resistivity is extremely pressure sensitive and passes through a maximum and
then a minimum in the vicinity of p_c. The (T,p) phase diagram and the
A(p)-dependence of both compounds can be qualitatively understood in terms of a
pressure-tuned competition between magnetic order and the Kondo effect
according to the Doniach picture. The temperature-volume (T,V) phase diagram of
CePd_2Ge_2 combined with that of CePd_2Si_2 shows that in stoichiometric
compounds mainly the change of interatomic distances influences the exchange
interaction. It will be argued that in contrast to this the much lower
p_c-value of CePd_{2.02}Ge_{1.98} is caused by an enhanced hybridization
between 4f and conduction electrons.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Multi-band Superconductivity in the Chevrel Phases SnMo6S8 and PbMo6S8
Sub-Kelvin scanning tunnelling spectroscopy in the Chevrel Phases SnMo6S8 and
PbMo6S8 reveals two distinct superconducting gaps with Delta_1 = 3 meV, Delta_2
~ 1.0 meV and Delta_1 = 3.1 meV, Delta_2 ~ 1.4 meV respectively. The gap
distribution is strongly anisotropic, with Delta_2 predominantly seen when
scanning across unit-cell steps on the (001) sample surface. The spectra are
well-fitted by an anisotropic two-band BCS s-wave gap function. Our
spectroscopic data are confirmed by electronic heat capacity measurements which
also provide evidence for a twin-gap scenario.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
High-pressure transport properties of CeRu_2Ge_2
The pressure-induced changes in the temperature-dependent thermopower S(T)
and electrical resistivity \rho(T) of CeRu_2Ge_2 are described within the
single-site Anderson model. The Ce-ions are treated as impurities and the
coherent scattering on different Ce-sites is neglected. Changing the
hybridisation \Gamma between the 4f-states and the conduction band accounts for
the pressure effect. The transport coefficients are calculated in the
non-crossing approximation above the phase boundary line. The theoretical S(T)
and \rho(T) curves show many features of the experimental data. The seemingly
complicated temperature dependence of S(T) and \rho(T), and their evolution as
a function of pressure, is related to the crossovers between various fixed
points of the model.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
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