Materials preparation, single-crystal growth, and the phase diagram of the cuprate high-temperature superconductor La1.6xNd0.4SrxCuO4

Mirela Dragomir, Qianli Ma, J. Patrick Clancy, Amirreza Ataei, Paul A. Dube, Sudarshan Sharma, Ashfia Huq, Hanna A. Dabkowska, Louis Taillefer, and Bruce D. Gaulin
Phys. Rev. Materials 4, 114801 – Published 4 November 2020

Abstract

One branch of the La-214 family of cuprate superconductors, La1.6xNd0.4SrxCuO4 (Nd-LSCO), has been of significant and sustained interest, in large part because it displays the full complexity of the phase diagram for canonical hole-doped, high-TC superconductivity, while also displaying relatively low superconducting critical temperatures. The low-superconducting TCs imply that experimentally accessible magnetic fields can suppress the superconductivity to zero temperature. In particular, this has enabled various transport and thermodynamic studies of the T=0 ground state in Nd-LSCO, free of superconductivity, across the critical doping p*=0.23 where the pseudogap phase ends. The strong dependence of its superconducting properties on its crystal symmetry has itself motivated careful studies of the Nd-LSCO structural phase diagram. This paper provides a systematic study and summary of the materials preparation and characterization of both single-crystal and polycrystalline samples of Nd-LSCO. Single-phase polycrystalline samples with x spanning the range from 0.01 to 0.40 have been synthesized, and large single crystals of La1.6xNd0.4SrxCuO4 for select x across the region (0.07, 0.12, 0.17, 0.19, 0.225, 0.24, and 0.26) were grown by the optical floating-zone method. Systematic neutron and x-ray-diffraction studies on these samples were performed at both low and room temperatures, 10 and 300 K, respectively. These studies allowed us to follow the various structural phase transitions and propose an updated structural phase diagram for Nd-LSCO. In particular, we found that the low-temperature tetragonal (LTT) phase ends at a critical doping pLTT=0.255±0.005, clearly separated from p*.

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  • Received 12 August 2020
  • Accepted 28 September 2020

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.4.114801

©2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Mirela Dragomir1,2,3,*, Qianli Ma4,*, J. Patrick Clancy2,4, Amirreza Ataei5, Paul A. Dube2, Sudarshan Sharma4, Ashfia Huq6, Hanna A. Dabkowska2, Louis Taillefer5,7, and Bruce D. Gaulin2,4,7

  • 1Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada, L8S 4M1
  • 2Brockhouse Institute for Materials Research, Hamilton, ON, Canada, L8S 4M1
  • 3Electronic Ceramics Department, Jožef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana 1000, Slovenia
  • 4Department of Physics and Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada, L8S 4M1
  • 5Institut Quantique, Département de Physique & RQMP, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC, Canada, J1K 2R1
  • 6Neutron Scattering Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA
  • 7Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5G 1M1

  • *These authors contributed equally to this work.

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Vol. 4, Iss. 11 — November 2020

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