Extraordinary physical properties of superconducting YBa1.4Sr0.6Cu3O6Se0.51 in a multiphase ceramic material
Abstract
We report on a novel material obtained by modifying pristine YBCO superconductor in solid phase synthesis via simultaneous partial substitution of Ba by Sr and O by Se. Simultaneous application of EDX and EBSD confirmed that Se atoms indeed enter the crystalline lattice cell. The detailed XRD analysis further confirmed this conclusion and revealed that the obtained polycrystalline material contains 5 phases, with the major phase (>30\%) being a cuprate YBa1.4Sr0.6Cu3O6Se% 0.51. The obtained superconductor demonstrates unique properties, including i) two superconducting transitions with Tc1≈ 35 K (granular surface phase) and Tc2≈ 13 K (bulk granular phase) - this granular phase arrangement naturally yields the Wohlleben effect; ii) reentrant diamagnetism and resistive state; iii) strong paramagnetism with Curie-Weiss behavior (% θCW ≈ 4 K) and the ferromagnetic phase overruled by superconductivity; iv) Schottky anomaly visible in the heat capacity data and most likely delivered by small clusters of magnetic moments. Thorough analysis of the heat capacity data reveals a strong-coupling d-wave pairing in its bulk phase (with 2 /Tc≈ 5), and, most importantly, a very unusual anomaly in this cuprate. There are reasons to associate this anomaly with the quantum criticality observed in traditional cuprate superconductors at much higher fields (achievable only in certain laboratories). In our case, the fields leading to quantum criticality are much weaker ( 7-9 T) thus opening avenues for exploration of the interplay between superconductivity and pair density waves by the wider research community.
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