We present the anisotropic optical conductivity of MgB2 between 0.1 and 3.7 eV at room temperature obtained on single crystals of different purity by the spectroscopic ellipsometry and reflectance measurements. The bare (unscreened) plasma frequency ωp is almost isotropic and equal to 6.3 eV, which contrasts some earlier reports of a very small value of ωp. The data suggests that the σ-bands are characterized by a stronger electron-phonon coupling λtr but smaller impurity scattering γimp, compared to the π-bands. The optical response along the boron planes is marked by an intense interband transition at 2.6 eV, due to which the reflectivity plasma edges along the a-and c-axes are shifted with respect to each other. As a result, the sample spectacularly changes color from a blueish-silver to the yellow as the polarization is rotated from the in-plane direction towards the c-axis. The optical spectra are in good agreement with the published ab initio calculations. The remaining discrepancies can be explained by the relative shift of σ-bands and π-bands by about 0.2 eV compared to the theoretical band structure, in agreement with the de Haas-van Alphen experiments. The widths of the Drude and the interband peaks are both very sensitive to the sample purity.
We present specific-heat data for Nb 3 Sn, a well-known technically applied superconductor with a critical temperature T c Х 18 K, in the temperature range from 1.2 to 200 K in zero magnetic field, and from 1.5 to 22 K in fields H ഛ 16 T. The particularly dense and homogeneous polycrystalline sample used for this study is characterized in detail. We determine the bulk upper critical field H c2 ͑T͒ from specific-heat data, and the Sommerfeld constant ␥ from the entropy S͑T͒. We investigate in detail a low-temperature anomaly already noticed in previous investigations in zero field, and find that this feature can be quantitatively ascribed to the presence of a second superconducting gap 2⌬ S ͑0͒Х0.8k B T c , in addition to the main one 2⌬ L ͑0͒Х4.9k B T c . The signature of this minor gap, which affects 7.5% of the electronic density-of-states, vanishes in high fields.
Kondo insulators and in particular their non-cubic representatives have remained poorly understood. Here we report on the development of an anisotropic energy pseudogap in the tetragonal compound CeRu4Sn6 employing optical reflectivity measurements in broad frequency and temperature ranges, and local density approximation plus dynamical mean field theory calculations. The calculations provide evidence for a Kondo insulator-like response within the a − a plane and a more metallic response along the c axis and qualitatively reproduce the experimental observations, helping to identify their origin.Correlated materials with gapped or pseudo-gapped ground states continue to be of great interest. The gap in the electronic density of states (DOS) either opens gradually with decreasing temperature, as the pseudogap of high-temperature superconductors [1], or emerges at a continuous or first order phase transition [2][3][4]. In heavy fermion compounds [5] -systems in which f and conduction electrons strongly interact -a narrow hybridization gap is known to emerge gradually [6][7][8][9]. Generically, the Fermi energy is situated in one of the hybridized bands and a metallic heavy fermion ground state arises. Only for special cases the Fermi energy lies within the gap and the ground state is Kondo insulating. Metallic heavy fermion systems have been intensively investigated over the past decades and are now, at least away from quantum criticality [10], well understood [11] within the framework of Landau Fermi liquid theory. Hence, a very few parameters, most notably the effective mass, allow us to describe thermodynamic and transport properties at the lowest temperatures. In comparison, the physics of Kondo insulators has proven to be much less tractable. This is at least in part due to the fact that the gapped ground state inhibits a characterization via the above properties. Many experimental efforts have therefore focussed on the determination of the gap width from temperature dependencies, which has frequently led to conflicting results, in particular for anisotropic Kondo insulators such as CeNiSn [12]. Here the strongly anisotropic transport and magnetic properties have been interpreted phenomenologically on the basis of a V-shaped DOS [13] or by invoking a hybridization gap with nodes [14][15][16] or extrinsic effects such as impurities, off stoichiometry or strain [17,18]. To advance the field it appears mandatory to model a number of carefully chosen materials ab initio, taking all essential ingredients into account.Here we investigate a new material, CeRu 4 Sn 6 , which due to its tetragonal crystal structure is simpler than the previously studied orthorhombic materials. In a combined experimental and theoretical effort we provide direct spectroscopic evidence for the development of an anisotropic pseudogap: While weak metallicity prevails in the optical conductivity along the c axis, insulatorlike behavior without a Drude peak is observed in the a − a plane. We trace this back to a correlated band structure whic...
We have investigated the optical conductivity of the prominent valence-fluctuating compounds EuIr(2)Si(2) and EuNi(2)P(2) in the infrared energy range to get new insights into the electronic properties of valence-fluctuating systems. For both compounds, we observe upon cooling the formation of a renormalized Drude response, a partial suppression of the optical conductivity below 100 meV, and the appearance of a midinfrared peak at 0.15 eV for EuIr(2)Si(2) and 0.13 eV for EuNi(2)P(2). Most remarkably, our results show a strong similarity with the optical spectra reported for many Ce- or Yb-based heavy-fermion metals and intermediate valence systems, although the phase diagrams and the temperature dependence of the valence differ strongly between Eu systems and Ce- or Yb-based systems. This suggests that the hybridization between 4f and conduction electrons, which is responsible for the properties of Ce and Yb systems, plays an important role in valence-fluctuating Eu systems.
We report the discovery of a new spin glass ground state in the transition metal monosilicides with the B20 crystallographic structure. Magnetic, transport, neutron and muon investigation of the solid solution Mn1−xCoxSi have revealed a new dome in the phase diagram with evidence of antiferromagnetic interactions. For Mn rich compounds, a sharp decrease of the Curie temperature is observed upon Co doping and neutron elastic scattering shows that helimagnetic order of MnSi persists up to x = 0.05 with a shortening of the helix period. For higher Co (0.05 < x < 0.90) concentrations, the Curie-Weiss temperature changes sign and the system enters a spin glass state upon cooling (Tg = 9 K for xCo = 0.50), due to chemical disorder. In this doping range, a minimum appears in the resistivity, attributed to scattering of conduction electron by localized magnetic moments.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.