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Effect of Controlled Artificial Disorder on the Magnetic Properties of EuFe(2)(As(1−x)P(x))(2) Ferromagnetic Superconductor

Static (DC) and dynamic (AC, at 14 MHz and 8 GHz) magnetic susceptibilities of single crystals of a ferromagnetic superconductor, [Formula: see text] (x = 0.23), were measured in pristine state and after different doses of 2.5 MeV electron or 3.5 MeV proton irradiation. The superconducting transitio...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ghimire, Sunil, Kończykowski, Marcin, Cho, Kyuil, Tanatar, Makariy A., Torsello, Daniele, Veshchunov, Ivan S., Tamegai, Tsuyoshi, Ghigo, Gianluca, Prozorov, Ruslan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8231935/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34199183
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14123267
Descripción
Sumario:Static (DC) and dynamic (AC, at 14 MHz and 8 GHz) magnetic susceptibilities of single crystals of a ferromagnetic superconductor, [Formula: see text] (x = 0.23), were measured in pristine state and after different doses of 2.5 MeV electron or 3.5 MeV proton irradiation. The superconducting transition temperature, [Formula: see text] , shows an extraordinarily large decrease. It starts at [Formula: see text] in the pristine sample for both AC and DC measurements, but moves to almost half of that value after moderate irradiation dose. Remarkably, after the irradiation not only [Formula: see text] moves significantly below the FM transition, its values differ drastically for measurements at different frequencies, ≈16 K in AC measurements and ≈12 K in a DC regime. We attribute such a large difference in [Formula: see text] to the appearance of the spontaneous internal magnetic field below the FM transition, so that the superconductivity develops directly into the mixed spontaneous vortex-antivortex state where the onset of diamagnetism is known to be frequency-dependent. We also examined the response to the applied DC magnetic fields and studied the annealing of irradiated samples, which almost completely restores the superconducting transition. Overall, our results suggest that in [Formula: see text] superconductivity is affected by local-moment ferromagnetism mostly via the spontaneous internal magnetic fields induced by the FM subsystem. Another mechanism is revealed upon irradiation where magnetic defects created in ordered [Formula: see text] lattice act as efficient pairbreakers leading to a significant [Formula: see text] reduction upon irradiation compared to other 122 compounds. On the other hand, the exchange interactions seem to be weakly screened by the superconducting phase leading to a modest increase of [Formula: see text] (less than 1 K) after the irradiation drives [Formula: see text] to below [Formula: see text]. Our results suggest that FM and SC phases coexist microscopically in the same volume.