RESUMEN
We report that high-quality single crystals of the hexagonal heavy fermion material uranium diauride (UAu2) become superconducting at pressures above 3.2 GPa, the pressure at which an unusual antiferromagnetic state is suppressed. The antiferromagnetic state hosts a marginal fermi liquid and the pressure evolution of the resistivity within this state is found to be very different from that approaching a standard quantum phase transition. The superconductivity that appears above this transition survives in high magnetic fields with a large critical field for all field directions. The critical field also has an unusual angle dependence suggesting that the superconductivity may have an order parameter with multiple components. An order parameter consistent with these observations is predicted to host half-quantum vortices (HQVs). Such vortices can be topologically entangled and have potential applications in quantum computing.
RESUMEN
The term Fermi liquid is almost synonymous with the metallic state. The association is known to break down at quantum critical points (QCPs), but these require precise values of tuning parameters, such as pressure and applied magnetic field, to exactly suppress a continuous phase transition temperature to the absolute zero. Three-dimensional non-Fermi liquid states, apart from superconductivity, that are unshackled from a QCP are much rarer and are not currently well understood. Here, we report that the triangular lattice system uranium diauride (UAu2) forms such a state with a non-Fermi liquid low-temperature heat capacity [Formula: see text] and electrical resistivity [Formula: see text] far below its Néel temperature. The magnetic order itself has a novel structure and is accompanied by weak charge modulation that is not simply due to magnetostriction. The charge modulation continues to grow in amplitude with decreasing temperature, suggesting that charge degrees of freedom play an important role in the non-Fermi liquid behavior. In contrast with QCPs, the heat capacity and resistivity we find are unusually resilient in magnetic field. Our results suggest that a combination of magnetic frustration and Kondo physics may result in the emergence of this novel state.
RESUMEN
The unconventional electronic ground state of Sr_{3}IrRuO_{7} is explored via resonant x-ray scattering techniques and angle-resolved photoemission measurements. As the Ru content approaches x=0.5 in Sr_{3}(Ir_{1-x}Ru_{x})_{2}O_{7}, intermediate to the J_{eff}=1/2 Mott state in Sr_{3}Ir_{2}O_{7} and the quantum critical metal in Sr_{3}Ru_{2}O_{7}, a thermodynamically distinct metallic state emerges. The electronic structure of this intermediate phase lacks coherent quasiparticles, and charge transport exhibits a linear temperature dependence over a wide range of temperatures. Spin dynamics associated with the long-range antiferromagnetism of this phase show nearly local, overdamped magnetic excitations and an anomalously large energy scale of 200 meV-an energy far in excess of exchange energies present within either the Sr_{3}Ir_{2}O_{7} or Sr_{3}Ru_{2}O_{7} solid-solution end points. Overdamped quasiparticle dynamics driven by strong spin-charge coupling are proposed to explain the incoherent spectral features of the strange metal state in Sr_{3}IrRuO_{7}.
RESUMEN
The floating zone technique is a well-established single crystal growth method in materials research, which is able to produce volumetrically large specimens with extremely high purities. However, traditional furnace designs have relied on heating from high-powered bulb sources in combination with parabolic mirrors and hence are constrained to transparent growth chambers with large solid angles of optical access. This results in a stark limitation on achievable processing gas pressures and in turn renders a range of compounds unsuitable for crystal growth by the floating zone technique, either due to excessive volatility or due to metastability. Here, we demonstrate a novel high-pressure laser-based floating zone system (HP-LFZ). The use of lasers for heating allows implementation of a high-strength metal growth chamber, permitting greatly enhanced processing pressures over conventional mirror-based designs, with the current design allowing for pressures up to 1000 bar. We demonstrate a series of example single crystal growths using this design in pressures up to 675 bar, a significant increase over processing pressures attainable in commercially available floating zone systems. The general utility of the HP-LFZ is also illustrated via growths of a range of complex oxides.
RESUMEN
The breakdown of [Formula: see text] antiferromagnetism in the limit of strong disorder is studied in Sr3(Ir1-x Mn x )2O7. Upon Mn-substitution, antiferromagnetic ordering of the Ir cations becomes increasingly two-dimensional, resulting in the complete suppression of long-range Ir magnetic order above [Formula: see text]. Long-range antiferromagnetism however persists on the Mn sites to higher Mn concentrations (x > 0.25) and is necessarily mediated via a random network of majority Ir sites. Our data suggest a shift in the Mn valence from Mn4+ to Mn3+ at intermediate doping levels, which in turn generates nonmagnetic Ir5+ sites and suppresses long-range order within the Ir network. The collapse of long-range [Formula: see text] antiferromagnetism and the survival of percolating antiferromagnetic order on Mn-sites demonstrates a complex 3d-5d exchange process that surprisingly enables minority Mn spins to order far below the conventional percolation threshold for a bilayer square lattice.
RESUMEN
Materials that exhibit both strong spin-orbit coupling and electron correlation effects are predicted to host numerous new electronic states. One prominent example is the Jeff = 1/2 Mott state in Sr2IrO4, where introducing carriers is predicted to manifest high temperature superconductivity analogous to the S = 1/2 Mott state of La2CuO4. While bulk superconductivity currently remains elusive, anomalous quasiparticle behaviors paralleling those in the cuprates such as pseudogap formation and the formation of a d-wave gap are observed upon electron-doping Sr2IrO4. Here we establish a magnetic parallel between electron-doped Sr2IrO4 and hole-doped La2CuO4 by unveiling a spin density wave state in electron-doped Sr2IrO4. Our magnetic resonant X-ray scattering data reveal the presence of an incommensurate magnetic state reminiscent of the diagonal spin density wave state observed in the monolayer cuprate (La1-xSr x )2CuO4. This link supports the conjecture that the quenched Mott phases in electron-doped Sr2IrO4 and hole-doped La2CuO4 support common competing electronic phases.