1,310 research outputs found
Impurity induced density of states and residual transport in nonunitary superconductors
We obtain general expressions for the residual density of states, electrical
conductivity and thermal conductivity for non-unitary superconductors due to
impurity scattering. We apply the results to the so-called `B phase' of
PrOs4Sb12, which we describe using a non-unitary gap function derived from
symmetry considerations. The conductivity tensor has inequivalent diagonal
components due to off-axis nodal positions which may be detectable in
experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
Microwave properties of : Influence of magnetic scattering
We report measurements of the surface impedance of
, . Increasing
concentration leads to some striking results not observed in samples doped
by non-magnetic constituents. The three principal features of the data
- multiple structure in the transition, a high residual resistance and, at high
concentrations, an upturn of the low data, are all characteristic of
the influence of magnetic scattering on superconductivity, and appear to be
common to materials where magnetism and superconductivity coexist. The low
behavior of appears to change from to at large
doping, and provides evidence of the influence of magnetic pairbreaking of the
.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figures, Revtex, 2-column format, uses graphicx. To
appear in Physica C. Postscript version also available at
http://sagar.physics.neu.edu/preprints.htm
Anomalous Paramagnetic Magnetization in Mixed State of CeCoIn single crystals
Magnetization and torque measurements were performed on CeCoIn single
crystals to study the mixed-state thermodynamics. These measurements allow the
determination of both paramagnetic and vortex responses in the mixed-state
magnetization. The paramagnetic magnetization is suppressed in the mixed state
with the spin susceptibility increasing with increasing magnetic field. The
dependence of spin susceptibility on magnetic field is due to the fact that
heavy electrons contribute both to superconductivity and paramagnetism and a
large Zeeman effect exists in this system. No anomaly in the vortex response
was found within the investigated temperature and field range
Crystalline electric field effects in the electrical resistivity of PrOsSb
The temperature and magnetic field dependencies of the electrical
resistivity of the recently discovered heavy fermion superconductor
\PrOsSb{} have features that are associated with the splitting of the Pr
Hund's rule multiplet by the crystalline electric field (CEF). These features
are apparently due to magnetic exchange and aspherical Coulomb scattering from
the thermally populated CEF-split Pr energy levels. The data
in zero magnetic field can be described well by calculations based on CEF
theory for various ratios of magnetic exchange and aspherical Coulomb
scattering, and yield CEF parameters that are qualitatively consistent with
those previously derived from magnetic susceptibility, specific heat, and
inelastic neutron scattering measurements. Calculated isotherms for a
ground state qualitatively account for the `dome-shaped' feature
in the measured isotherms.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
Signatures of pressure induced superconductivity in insulating Bi2212
We have performed several high pressure electrical resistance experiments on
Bi1.98Sr2.06Y0.68Cu2O8, an insulating parent compound of the high-Tc Bi2212
family of copper oxide superconductors. We find a resistive anomaly, a downturn
at low temperature, that onsets with applied pressure in the 20-40 kbar range.
Through both resistance and magnetoresistance measurements, we identify this
anomaly as a signature of induced superconductivity. Resistance to higher
pressures decreases Tc, giving a maximum of 10 K. The higher pressure
measurements exhibit a strong sensitivity to the hydrostaticity of the pressure
environment. We make comparisons to the pressure induced superconductivity now
ubiquitous in the iron arsenides.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Strong magnetic fluctuations in superconducting state of CeCoIn
We show results on the vortex core dissipation through current-voltage
measurements under applied pressure and magnetic field in the superconducting
phase of CeCoIn. We find that as soon as the system becomes
superconducting, the vortex core resistivity increases sharply as the
temperature and magnetic field decrease. The sharp increase in flux flow
resistivity is due to quasiparticle scattering on critical antiferromagnetic
fluctuations. The strength of magnetic fluctuations below the superconducting
transition suggests that magnetism is complimentary to superconductivity and
therefore must be considered in order to fully account for the low-temperature
properties of CeCoIn.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Inelastic neutron scattering studies of Crystal Field Levels in PrOsAs
We use neutron scattering to study the Pr crystalline electric field
(CEF) excitations in the filled skutterudite PrOsAs. By comparing
the observed levels and their strengths under neutron excitation with the
theoretical spectrum and neutron excitation intensities, we identify the
Pr CEF levels, and show that the ground state is a magnetic
triplet, and the excited states ,
and are at 0.4, 13 and 23 meV, respectively. A comparison of the
observed CEF levels in PrOsAs with the heavy fermion superconductor
PrOsSb reveals the microscopic origin of the differences in the
ground states of these two filled skutterudites.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Symmetry properties of the nodal superconductor PrOs4Sb12
We present a theoretical study of the superconducting gap function in
PrOs4Sb12 using a symmetry-based approach. A three-component order parameter in
the triplet channel best describes superconductivity. The gap function is
non-degenerate and the lower branch has four cusp nodes at unusual points of
the Fermi surface, which lead to power law behaviours in the density of states,
specific heat and nuclear spin relaxation rate.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev. B 7
Hybridization-Driven Orthorhombic Lattice Instability in URu2Si2
We have measured the elastic constant (C11-C12)/2 in URu2Si2 by means of
high-frequency ultrasonic measurements in pulsed magnetic fields H || [001] up
to 61.8 T in a wide temperature range from 1.5 to 116 K. We found a reduction
of (C11-C12)/2 that appears only in the temperature and magnetic field region
in which URu2Si2 exhibits a heavy-electron state and hidden-order. This change
in (C11-C12)/2 appears to be a response of the 5f-electrons to an orthorhombic
and volume conservative strain field \epsilon_xx-\epsilon_yy with
{\Gamma}3-symmetry. This lattice instability is likely related to a
symmetry-breaking band instability that arises due to the hybridization of the
localized f electrons with the conduction electrons, and is probably linked to
the hidden-order parameter of this compound.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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