Nuclear-order-induced quantum criticality and heavy-fermion superconductivity at ultra-low temperatures in YbRh$_2$Si$_2$
Erwin Schuberth, S. Wirth, F. Steglich

TL;DR
This study reveals that nuclear-order-induced quantum criticality in YbRh₂Si₂ leads to unconventional superconductivity at ultra-low temperatures, driven by Kondo-destruction quantum critical fluctuations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the emergence of bulk heavy-fermion superconductivity linked to nuclear-dominated hybrid order near a quantum critical point in YbRh₂Si₂.
Findings
Superconductivity appears below 2 mK at ultra-low temperatures.
Bulk superconductivity confirmed by Meissner effect measurements.
Superconducting islands grow and percolate around 6.5 mK.
Abstract
The tetragonal heavy-fermion metal YbRhSi orders antiferromagnetically at mK and exhibits an unconventional quantum critical point (QCP) of Kondo-destroying type at mT, for the magnetic field applied within the basal () plane. Ultra-low-temperature magnetization and heat-capacity measurements at very low fields indicate that the 4-electronic antiferromagnetic (AF) order is strongly suppressed by a nuclear-dominated hybrid order (`A-phase') at mK, such that quantum critical fluctuations develop at (Schuberth et al., Science \textbf{351}, 485 (2016)). This enables the onset of heavy-fermion superconductivity ( mK) which appears to be suppressed by the primary AF order at elevated temperatures. Measurements of the Meissner effect reveal bulk superconductivity, with decreasing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRare-earth and actinide compounds · Iron-based superconductors research · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
