Temperature dependent superfluid density in Ta-Doped CsV<sub>3</sub>Sb<sub>5</sub> determined by small-angle neutron scattering measurements of the vortex lattice
ORAL
Abstract
We have used small-angle neutron scattering to study the vortex lattice (VL) in Cs(V0.86Ta0.14)3Sb5 as a function of temperature. For this Ta-doping, the Charge Density Wave (CDW) observed in the 135 family of kagome superconductors is suppressed below Tc. The VL was prepared by field cooling to base temperature in applied fields of 0.1 T and 0.2 T, followed by a dampled field oscillation. Measurements were then performed as the sample is heated from 70 mT to Tc. At all measured fields and temperatures the VL has a triangular symmetry with Bragg peaks aligned along the [-1 2 0] crystalline directions. No disordering of the VL is observed as the temperature is increased. From measurements of the scattered intensity we determine the temeperature-dependent superfluid density, which follows that expected for an s-wave superconductor. However, at T ≈ 250 mK the scattered intensity exhibits a jump which may be due to the formation of a CDW phase.
*Work at Notre Dame was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under Award No. DE-SC0005051. Research work at Rice is supported by U.S. NSF-DMR-2100741. This work is based on experiments performed at the Swiss Spallation Neutron Source SINQ, Paul Scherrer Institute, Villigen, Switzerland.
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Presenters
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Morten R Eskildsen
- University of Notre Dame