24-26 November 2021
Online
Australia/Sydney timezone

Magnetic Ordering in Superconducting Sandwiches

24 Nov 2021, 16:05
15m
Online

Online

Oral Physics, Surface & Condensed Matter Physics, Surface & Condensed Matter

Speaker

Andrew Chan (The University of Auckland)

Description

Our cuprate-manganite ‘superconducting sandwich’ multilayers exhibit a highly unusual magnetic-field induced insulating-to-superconducting transition (IST), contrary to the commonly held understanding that magnetic fields are detrimental to superconductivity [1, 2]. This new behaviour is a result of the specific magnetic and electronic properties of the manganite coupling with the high-Tc cuprate (YBa2Cu3O7-δ, YBCO). Due to the specific manganite composition, Nd0.65(Ca0.7Sr0.3)0.35MnO3 (NCSMO), we hypothesize the behaviour to originate from CE-type antiferromagnetic ordering as well as charge and orbital ordering [3].

The magnetic data presented here will focus on polarized neutron reflectometry (PNR) and elastic neutron scattering on a YBCO-NCSMO trilayer and superlattice. The model that best described the PNR data for the trilayer had antiparallel moments at the YBCO-NCSMO interfaces. In the superlattice, the direction of moments at NCSMO interfaces were found to alternate with film depth whose long-ranged ordering was broken below 35 K in a 1 T applied field. The stability of the AFM order in the superlattice was further supported by a robustness of magnetic in-plane half-order elastic scattering peaks at 9 T. This evidences the interplay of magnetism and superconductivity that play a role in realizing the IST effect in our superconducting sandwiches.

REFERENCES
[1] B. Mallett et al. Phys. Rev. B. 94, 180503(R) (2016)
[2] E. Perret et al. Comms. Phys. 45, 1-10 (2018)
[3] Y. Tokura. Rep. Prog. Phys. 69, 797-851 (2006).

Condition of submission Yes
Which facility did you use for your research Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering
Presenter Gender Man
Level of Expertise Early Career <5 Years
Pronouns He/Him

Primary authors

Andrew Chan (The University of Auckland) Dr Nadine van der Heijden (The University of Auckland) Grace Causer (Technical University of Munich) Tilo Soehnel (The University of Auckland) Prof. M. Cather Simpson (The University of Auckland) Dr Kirrily Rule (Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering) Dr Wai-Tung (Hal) Lee (ANSTO) Prof. Christian Bernhard (University of Fribourg) Ben Mallett (University of Auckland)

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