Licentiate Thesis: Nanocalorimetry of electronic phase transitions in systems with unconventional superconductivity and magnetic ordering.
by
Donato Campanini(Stockholm university, Department of Physics)
→
Europe/Stockholm
FA31
FA31
Description
In this thesis, low temperature specific heat measurements on small (μg) single crystals of different
superconducting and magnetic systems are presented. The device used in this work features a
combination of high sensitivity and good accuracy over the temperature range 1-400 K and allows
measurements in high magnetic fields. It consists of a stack of thin films deposited in the center of a
Si3N4 membrane. A batch process for the production of up to 48 calorimeters from a 2" silicon wafer
was developed in order to overcome the scarcity of devices and allow systematic investigations. With
abundance of calorimeters, single crystals of three different systems were studied.
Fe2P is the parent compound of a broad family of magnetocaloric materials. The first-order para- to
ferromagnetic phase transition at TC = 216 K was investigated for fields H up to 2 T, applied parallel
and perpendicular to the easy axis of magnetization c. Strikingly different phase contours were
obtained depending on the field direction. In particular, for H ⊥ c, two different ferromagnetic phases,
with magnetization parallel and perpendicular to c are found. It was also possible to observe the
superheating/supercooling states, the latent heat, and the structural change associated to the first-order
transition.
BaFe2(As1-xPx)2 is a member of the recently discovered iron-based high-temperature superconductors
family. Crystals with three different compositions were measured to study the doping dependence of
the superconducting properties in the overdoped regime (x > 0.30). The electronic specific heat at low
temperatures was analyzed with a two-band α model, which allows to extract the gap amplitudes and
their weights. The degree of gap anisotropy was investigated from in-field measurements. Additional
information on the system was obtained by a combined analysis of the condensation energy and upper
critical field.
URu2Si2, a heavy fermion material, was studied around and above the hidden-order temperature THO =
17.5 K. The origin of the hidden-order phase is still not understood. High-resolution specific heat data
were collected to help clarify if any pseudogap state is seen to exist above THO. We found no evidence
for any bulk phase transition above THO.