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Hidden magnetism and quantum criticality in the heavy fermion superconductor CeRhIn5

  • Tuson Park
  • , F. Ronning
  • , H. Q. Yuan
  • , M. B. Salamon
  • , R. Movshovich
  • , J. L. Sarrao
  • , J. D. Thompson
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

With only a few exceptions that are well understood, conventional superconductivity does not coexist with long-range magnetic order (for example, ref. 1). Unconventional superconductivity, on the other hand, develops near a phase boundary separating magnetically ordered and magnetically disordered phases. A maximum in the superconducting transition temperature Tc develops where this boundary extrapolates to zero Kelvin, suggesting that fluctuations associated with this magnetic quantum-critical point are essential for unconventional superconductivity. Invariably, though, unconventional superconductivity masks the magnetic phase boundary when T < Tc, preventing proof of a magnetic quantum-critical point. Here we report specific-heat measurements of the pressure-tuned unconventional superconductor CeRhIn5 in which we find a line of quantum-phase transitions induced inside the superconducting state by an applied magnetic field. This quantum-critical line separates a phase of coexisting antiferromagnetism and superconductivity from a purely unconventional superconducting phase, and terminates at a quantum tetracritical point where the magnetic field completely suppresses superconductivity. The T → 0 K magnetic field-pressure phase diagram of CeRhIn5 is well described with a theoretical model developed to explain field-induced magnetism in the high-Tc copper oxides, but in which a clear delineation of quantum-phase boundaries has not been possible. These experiments establish a common relationship among hidden magnetism, quantum criticality and unconventional superconductivity in copper oxides and heavy-electron systems such as CeRhIn5.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)65-68
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume440
Issue number7080
DOIs
StatePublished - 2 Mar 2006
Externally publishedYes

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