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Anisotropy of the T vs. H phase diagram and the HO-LMAFM boundary in URu<sub>2-x</sub>Fe<sub>x</sub>Si<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

We explored the role of angle, θ, as a tuning parameter in URu2-xFexSi2, where θ is the angle between the magnetic field, H, and the c-axis. We first investigated the parent compound URu2Si2 by measuring electrical resistance, R, vs. H, at several selected θ, for temperatures T = 1.5, 10, and 13 K. We observed that R(H) scaled with the projection of the magnetic field onto the c-axis, and therefore the θ- and H-dependent behavior of R, including the so-called "hidden order" (HO) transition and the Fermi surface reconstruction in URu2Si2, at fixed T, demonstrate that R(θH) is actually dependent on H//c = H cosθ, consistent with a similar study reported previously. We continued this investigation on URu2-xFexSito observe whether θ becomes a tuning parameter as Fe substitution increases and the system is driven toward large-moment antiferromagnetic order (LMAFM). Measurements on R(θ) at μ0H = 20, 33, 40, and 45 T were conducted at 0.33 ≤ T ≤ 20 K and showed θ-dependent behavior in the various phase transitions of URu2-xFexSi2 (HO, LMAFM, SDW, Fermi surface, etc.). These phase transitions, as functions of T, H, and θ were plotted in a phase diagram of T vs. H//c for multiple x and reaffirmed that H//c, not θ, is a tuning parameter of URu2-xFexSi2 throughout all Fe concentrations. 

Publication: Planned paper: Anisotropy of the T vs. H phase diagram and the HO-LMAFM boundary in URu2-xFexSi2

Presenters

  • Yuhang Deng

    University of California, San Diego

Authors

  • Yuhang Deng

    University of California, San Diego

  • Naveen Pouse

    University of California, San Diego

  • Sheng Ran

    Washington University, St. Louis

  • David E Graf

    Florida State University, National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, NHMFL, Florida State University, National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and Department of Physics, Florida State University

  • You Lai

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • John Singleton

    Los Alamos Natl Lab, NHMFL, Los Alamos National Lab, NHMFL/ LANL

  • Fedor F Balakirev

    Los Alamos Natl Lab

  • Ryan Baumbach

    National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, NHFML; Florida State University, NHMFL; Florida State University

  • M Brian Maple

    Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego, University of California, San Diego, University of California - San Diego, University of California San Diego