Origin of the non-Fermi-liquid behavior in CeRh2As2
P. Khanenko, D. Hafner, K. Semeniuk, J. Banda, T. Luehmann, F. Baertl,, T. Kotte, J. Wosnitza, G. Zwicknagl, C. Geibel, J. F. Landaeta, S. Khim, E., Hassinger, and M. Brando

TL;DR
This study investigates the non-Fermi-liquid behavior in CeRh2As2, revealing that it weakly depends on magnetic field and angle, suggesting a nonmagnetic origin of quantum critical fluctuations in this heavy-fermion superconductor.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed low-temperature specific-heat measurements under various magnetic fields and angles, uncovering nonmagnetic origins of quantum critical fluctuations in CeRh2As2.
Findings
Non-Fermi-liquid behavior shows weak dependence on magnetic field and angle.
Results challenge the typical magnetic quantum critical point scenario.
Indicates a possible nonmagnetic origin of quantum critical fluctuations.
Abstract
Unconventional superconductivity in heavy-fermion systems appears often near magnetic quantum critical points (QCPs). This seems to be the case also for CeRh2As2 (Tc 0.31 K). CeRh2As2 shows two superconducting (SC) phases, SC1 and SC2, for a magnetic field along the c axis of the tetragonal unit cell, but only the SC1 phase is observed for a field along the basal plane. Furthermore, another ordered state (phase-I) is observed below T0 0.48 K whose nature is still unclear: Thermodynamic and magnetic measurements pointed to a non magnetic multipolar state, but recent SR and NQR/NMR experiments have clearly detected antiferromagnetic (AFM) order below T0 . Also, quasi-two-dimensional AFM fluctuations were observed in NMR and neutron-scattering experiments above T0. The proximity of a QCP is indicated by non-Fermi-liquid (NFL) behavior observed above the ordered…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRare-earth and actinide compounds · Iron-based superconductors research · Magnetic Properties of Alloys
