The application of a sufficiently strong magnetic field to a superconductor will, in general, destroy the superconducting state. Two mechanisms are responsible for this. The first is the Zeeman effect, which breaks apart the paired electrons if they are in a spin-singlet (but not a spin-triplet) state. The second is the so-called 'orbital' effect, whereby the vortices penetrate into the superconductors and the energy gain due to the formation of the paired electrons is lost. For the case of layered, two-dimensional superconductors, such as the high-Tc copper oxides, the orbital effect is reduced when the applied magnetic field is parallel to the conducting layers. Here we report resistance and magnetic-torque experiments on single crystals of the quasi-two-dimensional organic conductor lambda-(BETS)2FeCl4, where BETS is bis(ethylenedithio)tetraselenafulvalene. We find that for magnetic fields applied exactly parallel to the conducting layers of the crystals, superconductivity is induced for fields above 17 T at a temperature of 0.1 K. The resulting phase diagram indicates that the transition temperature increases with magnetic field, that is, the superconducting state is further stabilized with magnetic field.
Surfaces with self‐cleaning properties are desirable for many applications. Conceptually, super liquid‐repellent surfaces are required to be highly porous on the nano‐ or micrometer scale, which inherently makes them mechanically weak. Optimizing the balance of mechanical strength and liquid repellency is a core aspect toward applications. However, quantitative mechanical testing of porous, super liquid‐repellent surfaces is challenging due to their high surface roughness at different length scales and low stress tolerance. For this reason, mechanical testing is often performed qualitatively. Here, the mechanical responses of soot‐templated super liquid‐repellent surfaces are studied qualitatively by pencil and finger scratching and quantitatively by atomic force microscopy, colloidal probe force measurements, and nanoindentation. In particular, colloidal probe force measurements cover the relevant force and length scales. The effective elastic modulus, the plastic work Wplastic and the effective adhesive work Wadhesive are quantified. By combining quantitative information from force measurements with measurements of surface wetting properties, it is shown that mechanical strength can be balanced against low wettability by tuning the reaction parameters.
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