Tunable quantum critical point and detached superconductivity in Al-doped CrAs
Sungmin Park, Soohyeon Shin, Sung-Il Kim, Joe D. Thompson, and Tuson, Park

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how Al doping in CrAs tunes a quantum critical point separately from the superconducting dome, revealing that superconductivity can be independent of magnetic quantum criticality in correlated materials.
Contribution
It introduces Al doping as a method to separate the magnetic quantum critical point from the superconducting phase in CrAs, providing new insights into their relationship.
Findings
Al doping increases the AFM transition temperature TN.
Pressure suppresses TN to zero near 4.5 kbar, indicating a QCP.
Superconductivity dome remains unchanged despite doping and QCP separation.
Abstract
The origin of unconventional superconductivity and its relationship to a T=0 K continuous quantum phase transition (a quantum critical point, QCP), which is hidden inside the dome of a superconducting state, have long been an outstanding puzzle in correlated superconductors. The observation and tuning of the hidden QCP, which is critical in resolving the mystery, however, has been rarely reported due to lack of ideal systems. The helical antiferromagnet CrAs provides an example in which a dome of superconductivity appears at a pressure where its magnetic transition goes to zero temperature. Here we report the tuning of a projected critical point in CrAs via Al chemical doping (Al-CrAs) and separation of the magnetic critical point from the pressure-induced superconducting phase. When CrAs is doped with Al, its AFM ordering temperature TN increases from 260 K to 270 K. With applied…
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