Cargando…

Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity

We follow the evolution of the electronic properties of the titled homologous series when n as well as the atomic type of A and M are varied where for n = 1, A = Ca, Sr and M = Rh, Ir while for n = 3, A = Ca, Sr and M = Rh. The crystal structure of n = 1 members is known to be CaRh(2)B(2)-type (Fddd...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Takeya, Hiroyuki, ElMassalami, Mohammed, Terrazos, Luis A, Rapp, Raul E, Capaz, Rodrigo B, Fujii, Hiroki, Takano, Yoshihiko, Doerr, Mathias, Granovsky, Sergey A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5090507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27877576
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1468-6996/14/3/035003
_version_ 1782464405902983168
author Takeya, Hiroyuki
ElMassalami, Mohammed
Terrazos, Luis A
Rapp, Raul E
Capaz, Rodrigo B
Fujii, Hiroki
Takano, Yoshihiko
Doerr, Mathias
Granovsky, Sergey A
author_facet Takeya, Hiroyuki
ElMassalami, Mohammed
Terrazos, Luis A
Rapp, Raul E
Capaz, Rodrigo B
Fujii, Hiroki
Takano, Yoshihiko
Doerr, Mathias
Granovsky, Sergey A
author_sort Takeya, Hiroyuki
collection PubMed
description We follow the evolution of the electronic properties of the titled homologous series when n as well as the atomic type of A and M are varied where for n = 1, A = Ca, Sr and M = Rh, Ir while for n = 3, A = Ca, Sr and M = Rh. The crystal structure of n = 1 members is known to be CaRh(2)B(2)-type (Fddd), while that of n = 3 is Ca(3)Rh(8)B(6)-type (Fmmm); the latter can be visualized as a stacking of structural fragments from AM(3)B(2) (P6/mmm) and AM(2)B(2). The metallic properties of the n = 1 and 3 members are distinctly different: on the one hand, the n = 1 members are characterized by a linear coefficient of the electronic specific heat γ ≈ 3 mJ mol(−1) K(−2), a Debye temperature θ(D) ≈ 300 K, a normal conductivity down to 2 K and a relatively strong linear magnetoresistivity for fields up to 150 kOe. The n = 3 family, on the other hand, exhibits γ ≈ 18 mJ mol(−1) K(−2), θ(D) ≈ 330 K, a weak linear magnetoresistivity and an onset of superconductivity (for Ca(3)Rh(8)B(6), T(c) = 4.0 K and H(c2) = 14.5 kOe, while for Sr(3)Rh(8) B(6), T(c) = 3.4 K and H(c2) ≈ 4.0 kOe). These remarkable differences are consistent with the findings of the electronic band structures and density of state (DOS) calculations. In particular, satisfactory agreement between the measured and calculated γ was obtained. Furthermore, the Fermi level, E(F), of Ca(3)Rh(8)B(6) lies at almost the top of a pronounced local DOS peak, while that of CaRh(2)B(2) lies at a local valley: this is the main reason behind the differences between the, e.g., superconducting properties. Finally, although all atoms contribute to the DOS at E(F), the contribution of the Rh atoms is the strongest.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5090507
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Taylor & Francis
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-50905072016-11-22 Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity Takeya, Hiroyuki ElMassalami, Mohammed Terrazos, Luis A Rapp, Raul E Capaz, Rodrigo B Fujii, Hiroki Takano, Yoshihiko Doerr, Mathias Granovsky, Sergey A Sci Technol Adv Mater Articles We follow the evolution of the electronic properties of the titled homologous series when n as well as the atomic type of A and M are varied where for n = 1, A = Ca, Sr and M = Rh, Ir while for n = 3, A = Ca, Sr and M = Rh. The crystal structure of n = 1 members is known to be CaRh(2)B(2)-type (Fddd), while that of n = 3 is Ca(3)Rh(8)B(6)-type (Fmmm); the latter can be visualized as a stacking of structural fragments from AM(3)B(2) (P6/mmm) and AM(2)B(2). The metallic properties of the n = 1 and 3 members are distinctly different: on the one hand, the n = 1 members are characterized by a linear coefficient of the electronic specific heat γ ≈ 3 mJ mol(−1) K(−2), a Debye temperature θ(D) ≈ 300 K, a normal conductivity down to 2 K and a relatively strong linear magnetoresistivity for fields up to 150 kOe. The n = 3 family, on the other hand, exhibits γ ≈ 18 mJ mol(−1) K(−2), θ(D) ≈ 330 K, a weak linear magnetoresistivity and an onset of superconductivity (for Ca(3)Rh(8)B(6), T(c) = 4.0 K and H(c2) = 14.5 kOe, while for Sr(3)Rh(8) B(6), T(c) = 3.4 K and H(c2) ≈ 4.0 kOe). These remarkable differences are consistent with the findings of the electronic band structures and density of state (DOS) calculations. In particular, satisfactory agreement between the measured and calculated γ was obtained. Furthermore, the Fermi level, E(F), of Ca(3)Rh(8)B(6) lies at almost the top of a pronounced local DOS peak, while that of CaRh(2)B(2) lies at a local valley: this is the main reason behind the differences between the, e.g., superconducting properties. Finally, although all atoms contribute to the DOS at E(F), the contribution of the Rh atoms is the strongest. Taylor & Francis 2013-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5090507/ /pubmed/27877576 http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1468-6996/14/3/035003 Text en © 2013 National Institute for Materials Science http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ Content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0) . Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
spellingShingle Articles
Takeya, Hiroyuki
ElMassalami, Mohammed
Terrazos, Luis A
Rapp, Raul E
Capaz, Rodrigo B
Fujii, Hiroki
Takano, Yoshihiko
Doerr, Mathias
Granovsky, Sergey A
Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity
title Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity
title_full Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity
title_fullStr Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity
title_full_unstemmed Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity
title_short Probing the electronic properties of ternary A(n)M(3n−1)B(2n) (n = 1: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh, Ir and n = 3: A = Ca, Sr; M = Rh) phases: observation of superconductivity
title_sort probing the electronic properties of ternary a(n)m(3n−1)b(2n) (n = 1: a = ca, sr; m = rh, ir and n = 3: a = ca, sr; m = rh) phases: observation of superconductivity
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5090507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27877576
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1468-6996/14/3/035003
work_keys_str_mv AT takeyahiroyuki probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT elmassalamimohammed probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT terrazosluisa probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT rappraule probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT capazrodrigob probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT fujiihiroki probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT takanoyoshihiko probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT doerrmathias probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity
AT granovskysergeya probingtheelectronicpropertiesofternaryanm3n1b2nn1acasrmrhirandn3acasrmrhphasesobservationofsuperconductivity