The resistivity of the heavy-fermion superconductor CeCoIn5 was measured as a function of temperature, down to 25 mK and in magnetic fields of up to 16 T applied perpendicular to the basal plane. With increasing field, we observe a suppression of the non-Fermi liquid behavior, rho approximately T, and the development of a Fermi liquid state, with its characteristic rho=rho(0)+AT2 dependence. The field dependence of the T2 coefficient shows critical behavior with an exponent of 1.37. This is evidence for a field-induced quantum critical point (QCP), occurring at a critical field which coincides, within experimental accuracy, with the superconducting critical field H(c2). We discuss the relation of this field-tuned QCP to a change in the magnetic state, seen as a change in magnetoresistance from positive to negative, at a crossover line that has a common border with the superconducting region below approximately 1 K.
The parent compounds of iron-arsenide superconductors, AFe2As2 (A=Ca, Sr, Ba), undergo a tetragonal to orthorhombic structural transition at a temperature TTO in the range 135 to 205 K depending on the alkaline earth element. Below TTO the free standing crystals split into equally populated structural domains, which mask intrinsic, in-plane, anisotropic properties of the materials.Here we demonstrate a way of mechanically detwinning CaFe2As2 and BaFe2As2. The detwinning is nearly complete, as demonstrated by polarized light imaging and synchrotron X-ray measurements, and reversible, with twin pattern restored after strain release. Electrical resistivity measurements in the twinned and detwinned states show that resistivity, ρ, decreases along the orthorhombic ao-axis but increases along the orthorhombic bo-axis in both compounds. Immediately below TTO the ratio ρ bo /ρao = 1.2 and 1.5 for Ca and Ba compounds, respectively. Contrary to CaFe2As2, BaFe2As2 reveals an anisotropy in the nominally tetragonal phase, suggesting that either fluctuations play a larger role above TTO in BaFe2As2 than in CaFe2As2, or that there is a higher temperature crossover or phase transition.
Detailed measurements of the global and local electromagnetic properties of Ba(Fe0.93Co0.07)2As2 single crystals are reported. Analysis of the irreversible magnetic response provides strong evidence for similar vortex physics in this Fe-based pnictide superconductor to the high-Tc cuprates, such as Y-Ba-Cu-O or Nd-Ce-Cu-O. In particular, we have found a nonmonotonic "fishtail" magnetization in M (H, T = const) loops and its signature is also present in M (H = const, T ) scans. The supercurrent density is evaluated by using several techniques, including direct transport measurements. At 5 K we estimate its value to be a moderate j ≈ 2.6 ± 0.2 × 10 5 A/cm 2 . Analysis of the magnetic relaxation is consistent with the collective pinning and creep models (weak pinning and fast creep) and suggests a crossover from the collective to the plastic creep regime in fields exceeding the value corresponding to the maximum in fishtail magnetization.
In a superconductor, the ratio of the carrier density, n, to their effective mass, m * , is a fundamental property directly reflecting the length scale of the superfluid flow, the London penetration depth, λL. In two dimensional systems, this ratio n/m * (∼ 1/λ 2 L ) determines the effective Fermi temperature, TF . We report a sharp peak in the x-dependence of λL at zero temperature in clean samples of BaFe2(As1−xPx)2 at the optimum composition x = 0.30, where the superconducting transition temperature Tc reaches a maximum of 30 K. This structure may arise from quantum fluctuations associated with a quantum critical point (QCP). The ratio of Tc/TF at x = 0.30 is enhanced, implying a possible crossover towards the Bose-Einstein condensate limit driven by quantum criticality.In two families of high temperature superconductors, cuprates and iron-pnictides, superconductivity emerges in close proximity to an antiferromagnetically ordered state, and the critical temperature T c has a dome shaped dependence on doping or pressure [1][2][3]. What happens inside this superconducting dome is still a matter of debate [3][4][5]. In particular, elucidating whether a quantum critical point (QCP) is hidden inside it (Figs. 1A and B) may be key to understanding high-T c superconductivity [4,5]. A QCP marks the position of a quantum phase transition (QPT), a zero temperature phase transition driven by quantum fluctuations [7].The London penetration depth λ L is a property that may be measured at low temperature in the superconducting state to probe the electronic structure of the material, and look for signatures of a QCP. The absolute value of λ L in the zero-temperature limit immediately gives the superfluid density λ −2which is a direct probe of the superconducting state; here m * i and n i are the effective mass and concentration of the superconducting carriers in band i, respectively [8]. Measurements on high-quality crystals are necessary because impurities and inhomogeneity may otherwise wipe out the signatures of the QPT. Another advantage of this approach is that it does not require the application of a strong magnetic field, which may induce a different QCP or shift the zero-field QCP [9].BaFe 2 (As 1−x P x ) 2 is a particularly suitable system for penetration depth measurements as, in contrast to most other Fe-based superconductors, very clean [10] and homogeneous crystals of the whole composition series can be grown [11]. In this system, the isovalent substitution of P for As in the parent compound BaFe 2 As 2 offers an elegant way to suppress magnetism and induce superconductivity [11]. Non-Fermi liquid properties are apparent in the normal state above the superconducting dome ( Fig. 2A) [11,12] and de Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) oscillations [10] have been observed over a wide x range including the superconducting compositions, giving detailed information on the electronic structure. Because P and As are isoelectric, the system remains compensated for all values of x (i.e., volumes of the electron and hole Fermi surfaces...
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