Evidence for Highly Correlated Electron Behavior in Dy under Extreme Compression Resulting in Strongly Enhanced Magnet Interactions
ORAL
Abstract
Most lanthanide metals have stable, highly localized 4$f$ magnetic moments, the magnetic ordering temperature $T_{\mathrm{o}}$ following standard de Gennes scaling. Under extreme pressure, however, the 4$f $state of some lanthanides appears to become unstable, as evidenced by: (i) a volume collapse at a critical pressure $P_{\mathrm{vc}}$, usually accompanied by a structural transition from high to low symmetry, (ii) strong deviations from de Gennes scaling in the pressure dependence of $T_{\mathrm{o}}$, in particular, for Dy a dramatic increase in $T_{\mathrm{o}}$ above $P_{\mathrm{vc}}$, (iii) very strong magnetic pair breaking by lanthanide impurities in a superconducting host. Here we discuss possible origins for these anomalous findings in light of our recent electrical resistivity and synchrotron spectroscopy experiments on selected lanthanides and their dilute magnetic alloys in a superconducting Y host.
*Work at Washington University is supported by NSF grant DMR-1104742 and CDAC through NNSA/DOE grant DE-FC52-08NA28554. Work at the Argonne Labs is supported by DOE contract DE-ACO2-06CH11357.
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