2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session D38: Focus Session: Superconductivity-Properties of Doped and Irradiated Magnesium Diboride and Related Compounds
2:30 PM–5:06 PM,
Monday, March 13, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 341
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: David Larbalestier, University of Wisconsin
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.D38.1
Abstract: D38.00001 : Scattering in MgB$_{2}$ produced by substitutions and damage
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Marina Putti
(University of Genova, CNR-INFM-LAMIA)
The two-gap nature of superconductivity is a unique feature of
MgB$_{2
}$that stimulates many theoretical and experimental
investigations. From the
beginning it was pointed out that the peculiar role of disorder
in a two-gap
superconductor In fact, inter-band scattering by non-magnetic
impurities is
expected to suppresses the critical temperature T$_{c}$ down to
20 K, where
an equivalent one-gap BCS system stabilizes. The verification of
these
predictions has motivated several efforts to introduce defects
in
MgB$_{2}$
by substitutions (Al in sites of Mg and C in sites of B) and by
irradiation.
Substitutions modify electronic structure so that
superconductivity can be
influenced. To overcome this problem we studied two different
kind of
samples: co-doped Mg$_{1-x}$(AlLi)$_{x}$B$_{2}$ in which the
disorder
induced by the Mg substitution is accompanied by a rather
complete charge
compensation, and neutron irradiated Mg$^{11}$B$_{2}$. In both
the sample
series remarkable changes in the band structure are not
expected.
The superconducting properties of Mg$_{1-x}$(AlLi)$_{x}$B$_{2
}$are compared
with those of Mg$_{1-x}$Al$_{x}$B$_{2}$. All the properties
scale
systematically as a function of the Al content rather than
electron doping.
This suggests that the lattice deformations induced by Al,
namely
point-like
defects and lattice compression, are very effective in tuning
the
superconducting properties.
Similar conclusion can be drawn by the study of neutron
irradiated samples.
By increasing the neutron fluence, T$_{c}$ monotonously
decreases
down to 9
K, the resistivity raises by two order of magnitude and the cell
volume
increases (1.7{\%}). Our results demonstrate that the critical
temperature
is suppressed by the disorder well down the value of 20 K. On
the
other
hand, the two-gap feature evident in the temperature range above
21 K,
disappears when T$_{c}$ is lowered down to 11 and 8.7 K a
single-gap
superconductivity is established.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.D38.1