The resistive transition to superconductivity in YbRh<sub>2</sub>Si<sub>2</sub>.

 · Invited

Abstract

We report electrical transport measurements on the putative heavy fermion superconductor YbRh2Si2 [1]. Measurements of the Nyquist noise were made on a high quality single crystal sample, over the temperature range 1K to 0.6 mK. On cooling below 12 mK, there is a clear transition from normal metal into a state in which the resistance decreases with decreasing temperature, initially approximately linearly, towards zero. We propose this to be a superconducting state, with phase fluctuations. The transition to a zero-resistance phase-coherent superconducting state is identified at 3.6 mK. The Nyquist noise was then studied in magnetic fields up to 9 mT, applied in plane, perpendicular to the c-axis. The zero resistance state was observed to be quenched above approximately 6 mT. At 9 mT we observe “re-entrance” of the normal state resistance at the lowest temperature. In the light of this critical field behavior, we discuss the nature of the superconductivity in the system, and the interplay with both electronic and nuclear magnetism. This work opens the prospect of tuning the magnetism by choice of Yb isotope in enriched samples, and studies at ultralow temperatures of electric transport at the field-tuned quantum critical point.
[1] E. Schuberth et al., Science, 351, 495 (2016).

*Supported by EPSRC EP/K004077/1, DFG BR 4110/1-1, DFG KB 3831/4-1.

Presenters

  • John Saunders

    • Physics, Royal Holloway University of London

Authors

  • Lev Levitin

    • Physics, Royal Holloway University of London
  • Harriet van der Vliet

    • Physics, Royal Holloway University of London
  • Jan Nyeki

    • Physics, Royal Holloway University of London
  • Andrew Casey

    • Physics, Royal Holloway University of London
  • Sandra Hamann

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
  • Alexander Steppke

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
  • Markus Koenig

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
  • Kristin Kliemt

    • Physics Institut, Goethe University
  • Cornelius Krellner

    • Physics Institut, Goethe University
  • Manuel Brando

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
  • John Saunders

    • Physics, Royal Holloway University of London