Evidence for unconventional superconducting fluctuations in heavy-fermion compound CeNi2Ge2

Abstract

We present evidence for unconventional superconducting fluctuations in a heavy-fermion compound CeNi2Ge2. The temperature dependence of the 73Ge nuclear-spin-lattice-relaxation rate 1/T1 indicates the development of magnetic correlations and the formation of a Fermi-liquid state at temperatures lower than T FL=0.4 K, where 1/T1T is constant. The resistance and 1/T1T measured on an as-grown sample decrease below T c onset = 0.2 K and T c NQR = 0.1 K, respectively; these are indicative of the onset of superconductivity. However, after annealing the sample to improve its quality, these superconducting signatures disappear. These results are consistent with the emergence of unconventional superconducting fluctuations in close proximity to a quantum critical point from the superconducting to the normal phase in CeNi2Ge2.

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