Superconducting and normal states in quantum materials

Lead Research Organisation: UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

Materials discovery feeds scientific and technological progress. Quantum materials host collective phenomena that defy a semi-classical description, for example because they arise from strong correlations or involve topological order. The diversity of these collective phenomena, their reach into practicable temperature regions and their tunability enable new technologies. Foremost among them is superconductivity, a macroscopic quantum phenomenon with multiple applications ranging from powerful magnets used in MRI scanners, fusion reactors and particle accelerators to lightweight motors and generators, low-noise rf filters, low-power electronics, and quantum devices used in sensing or computing. In most superconductors, the required electronic interactions are produced by dynamic lattice distortions. Alternatively, these interactions can be caused by more complex quantum processes similar to those which give rise to magnetism. Such unconventional 'superconductivity without phonons' is associated with a rich range of properties, some of which are highly desirable, such as resilience to high magnetic fields, current densities or temperatures.

In this project, we investigate the drivers of the unusual superconducting and normal states in four material families, building on our recent breakthroughs and discoveries:
(i) iron-germanide superconductors YFe2Ge2 and LuFe2Ge2,
(ii) moderate heavy fermion compounds CeNi2Ge2 and CePd2Si2,
(iii) the high pressure Kondo lattice superconductor CeSb2,
(iv) quasiperiodic host-guest structures such as high pressure Bi, Sb and Ba.

YFe2Ge2 in family (i) and CeNi2Ge2 in family (ii) form close to the border of magnetism at low temperature but just on the paramagnetic side, whereas their isoelectronic sister materials LuFe2Ge2 and CePd2Si2 order magnetically. High pressure CeSb2 (iii) displays robust superconductivity at magnetic fields that appear too high to allow spin singlet Cooper pairs. The quasiperiodic materials (iv) can host a low frequency sliding mode which dramatically affects normal state properties and causes unusually strong electron-phonon coupling.

Because these materials differ in many details but also share common phenomenology, new insights will arise from studying them in one coherent programme. Fuelled by the clean, high quality samples that our recent crystal growth advances have produced, the programme leverages strong input from multiple project partners. These augment our local high field, high pressure measurements with specialised spectroscopic, thermodynamic and transport techniques.

Prominent theory support will examine experimental findings to answer key research questions concerning
(a) the role of soft modes, whether vibrational, magnetic or otherwise,
(b) the origin of non-Fermi liquid signatures in transport and the notion of Planckian dissipation in correlated metals,
(c) the nature and tunability of superconducting pairing interactions, and
(d) the nature and gap structure of the superconducting state itself.

These are hard but timely questions: 40 years after the discovery of the first unconventional superconductor, CeCu2Si2, the nature of its superconducting state is again under intense scrutiny, and the first oxide superconductor to be found outside the copper-oxide family, Sr2RuO4, is likewise hotly debated. The new superconductors listed above significantly widen the range of clean materials in which these fundamental questions can be studied effectively.

The resulting insights help guide the search for further new unconventional superconductors in the vast space of materials, and studying these new materials in turn produces new insights and more precise guiding principles. There is scope and need for improving the success rate of these searches by leveraging computer modelling, which will gather momentum as the programme unfolds, eventually leading the way to functional quantum materials with practically useful properties.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title Miniature rotatable piston-cylinder pressure cells 
Description We have further miniaturised the piston-cylinder pressure cells used to achieve pressures of order 20 kbar for transport, magnetic or thermodynamic measurements under hydrostatic conditions. The new generation of cells are small enough to be rotatable in the bore of a high field superconducting magnet system. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2024 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The new cells have already allowed mapping out the superconducting phase boundary in UTe2 for varying field angles at low temperatures. They will increasingly be used for quantum oscillation measurements. 
 
Description Exchange of high quality UTe2 crystals 
Organisation Charles University
Country Czech Republic 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Numerous measurements at low temperatures and in high magnetic fields, including high pressure measurements, in Cambridge and at high field laboratories abroad.
Collaborator Contribution The Prague team has provided and is continuing to provide high quality crystals of the unconventional superconductor UTe2, which are needed for low temperature/high field/high pressure measurements investigating normal and superconducting states in this material.
Impact One Nature Communications paper already published, five further papers currently in the pipeline, of which two are submitted and three more are on the preprint archive.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Joint low temperature measurements on high quality crystals of NbFe2 and YFe2Ge2 
Organisation Max Planck Society
Country Germany 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Provided crystals and suggested aspects of the experiment in the case of NbFe2. Provided crystals and took part in the experiment in the case of YFe2Ge2.
Collaborator Contribution Carried out low temperature magnetic torque and heat capacity measurements at the MPI-CPfS in Dresden
Impact Detailed low temperature magnetic measurements in NbFe2 samples of varying stoichiometry have improved our understanding of the origins of magnetic anisotropy in this complex material and will contribute to a future publication. Heat capacity measurements in YFe2Ge2 have helped us develop our understanding of the superconducting order parameter in YFe2Ge2.
Start Year 2013