Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2020; Denver, Colorado
Session M48: Superconductivity: Materials, Growth, Structure
11:15 AM–2:03 PM,
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Room: Mile High Ballroom 1A
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Ulrich Welp, Argonne Natl Lab
Abstract: M48.00013 : Magnetic and superconducting properties of the Ir – rich compounds MIr3 (M=Ce, Th and Nd)*
Presenter:
Karolina Górnicka
(Faculty of Applied Physics and Mathematics, Gdansk University of Technology)
Authors:
Karolina Górnicka
(Faculty of Applied Physics and Mathematics, Gdansk University of Technology)
Elizabeth M. Carnicom
(Department of Chemistry, Princeton University)
Debarchan Das
(Institute of Low Temperature and Structure Research, Polish Acad. of Sci.)
Sylwia Gutowska
(Faculty of Physics and Applied Computer Science, AGH University of Science and Technology)
Bartomiej Wiendlocha
(Faculty of Physics and Applied Computer Science, AGH University of Science and Technology)
Weiwei Xie
(Louisiana State University)
Robert J. Cava
(Department of Chemistry, Princeton University)
Dariusz Kaczorowski
(Institute of Low Temperature and Structure Research, Polish Acad. of Sci.)
Tomasz Klimczuk
(Faculty of Applied Physics and Mathematics, Gdansk University of Technology)
In the case of NdIr3, our measurements indicate a ferromagnetic ground state with the Curie temperature TC = 10.6 K. The heat-capacity anomaly confirms the bulk nature of the transition, though Cp = 11.7 J mol−1K−1 is lower than expected for J = 9/2 and instead close to that of a J = 1/2 system. This suggests that the Nd ions are subject to a crystalline electrical field that removes spin degeneracy and leaves the Nd ions in a doublet ground state.
*This work was supported by Ministry of Science and Higher Education (Poland) under project DI2016 020546. The work at Princeton was supported by the Department of Energy, Division of Basic Energy Sciences, Grant DE-FG02-98ER45706.
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