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Pressure induced superconductivity in a CeRhSi(3)single crystal-the high pressure study

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2021

Abstract

Pressure induced superconductivity in non-centrosymmetric CeRhSi(3)and CeIrSi(3)compounds has attracted significant attention of the scientific community since its discovery 15 years ago. Up-to-date, all reported experimental results were obtained employing the hybrid-cylinder piston pressure cells with a maximum reachable pressure of 3 GPa.

Present study focuses on the superconducting state at higher, so far unreported, pressures using the Bridgman anvil cell and a CeRhSi(3)single crystal synthesized by the Sn-true-flux method. The initial increase of superconducting critical temperature from 0.4 K at 1.1 GPa to 1.1 K at 2.4 GPa is followed by a gradual suppression of superconducting state upon increasing the pressure above 3.0 GPa, forming a typical dome.

The pressure induced superconductivity is expected to be completely suppressed in the pressure region between 4.5 and 5.0 GPa. Temperature dependence of electrical resistivity in constant magnetic fields and high pressures, as well as the magnetoresistance measurements, reveal a large critical field, exceeding 19 T at 0.6 K and 2.4 GPa, sharply decreasing receding the superconductivity dome.

The previously reportedT-pandH-Tphase diagrams are completed by our high-pressure data and discussed in the frame of previous results.