RESUMEN
We report the discovery of superconductivity at a pressure-induced magnetic quantum phase transition in the Kondo lattice system CeSb_{2}, sustained up to magnetic fields that exceed the conventional Pauli limit eightfold. Like CeRh_{2}As_{2}, CeSb_{2} is locally noncentrosymmetric around the Ce site, but the evolution of critical fields and normal state properties as CeSb_{2} is tuned through the quantum phase transition motivates a fundamentally different explanation for its resilience to applied field.
RESUMEN
We show that the quasi-skutterudite superconductor Sr(3)Ir(4)Sn(13) undergoes a structural transition from a simple cubic parent structure, the I phase, to a superlattice variant, the I' phase, which has a lattice parameter twice that of the high temperature phase. We argue that the superlattice distortion is associated with a charge density wave transition of the conduction electron system and demonstrate that the superlattice transition temperature T(*) can be suppressed to zero by combining chemical and physical pressure. This enables the first comprehensive investigation of a superlattice quantum phase transition and its interplay with superconductivity in a cubic charge density wave system.
RESUMEN
We report the discovery of superconductivity at high pressure in SrFe(2)As(2) and BaFe(2)As(2). The superconducting transition temperatures are up to 27 K in SrFe(2)As(2) and 29 K in BaFe(2)As(2), the highest obtained for materials with pressure-induced superconductivity thus far.
RESUMEN
While the highest pressures can be achieved with diamond anvil cells, limited sample size and anvil geometry have hampered their application in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments due to weak signal-to-noise. Here we report a new probe design that is based on having the resonant radio frequency coil that encloses the sample within the anvil cell inside the gasket hole. This increases the filling factor tremendously and results in greatly enhanced NMR sensitivity. The setup is described together with room temperature Na and Al NMR experiments.