Discovery of a new strong-coupling superconductor Y<sub>7</sub>Ru<sub>4</sub>InGe<sub>12</sub> by indium flux
ORAL
Abstract
Compounds containing rare earth, transition metal and germanium elements can exhibit interesting phenomena such as charge density wave, complex magnetism and superconductivity. Using indium flux makes it possible to synthesis new compounds under a relative low temperature. Here we discovered a new superconductor Y7Ru4InGe12 with Tc ~ 5.8 K grown from the indium flux, which is confirmed by resistivity, magnetization and specific heat measurements. It is a type-II superconductor and its upper critical fields are estimated to be 5.4 and 2.7 T along and perpendicular to the c axis, respectively. The estimated mean free path along the c axis is ~ 29 Å, much smaller than the superconducting coherence length ~ 172 Å, putting it in a dirty limit regime. The specific heat jump of this superconductor ΔC/γeTc ≈ 2.4 is much larger than the BCS theoretical value 1.43, pointing to a strong-coupling scenario. A new polymorphism of LuRuGe and several trials to synthesize isostructural compounds of Y7Ru4InGe12 by replacing the rare earth elements will also be presented in this talk.
*Work at Argonne National Laboratory was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Science, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division.
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Presenters
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Jinke Bao
- Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory
- Argonne National Laboratory