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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Thermische und elektrische Transportuntersuchungen an niederdimensionalen korrelierten Elektronensystemen

Steckel, Frank 03 November 2015 (has links) (PDF)
In dieser Arbeit werden Messungen der elektrischen und thermischen Transportkoeffizienten an einem antiferromagnetisch ordnenden Iridat und FeAs-basierten Hochtemperatursupraleitern vorgestellt und analysiert. Iridate sind Materialien mit starker Spin-Bahn-Kopplung. In dem zweidimensionalen Vertreter Sr_2IrO_4 führt diese Kopplung zu isolierendem Mott-Verhalten mit gleichzeitiger antiferromagnetischer Ordnung der gekoppelten Spin-Bahn-Momente. Somit stellt Sr2IrO4 ein Modellsystem für die Untersuchung magnetischer Anregungen dieser Momente in Iridaten dar. Die Analyse der Wärmeleitfähigkeit von Sr_2IrO_4 liefert erstmals klare Hinweise auf magnetische Wärmeleitung in den Iridaten. Die extrahierte magnetische freie Weglänge gibt Aufschluss über die Streuprozesse der zum Wärmetransport beitragenden Magnonen und lässt Schlüsse über die Anregungen des gekoppelten Spin-Bahnsystems zu. Die FeAs-Hochtemperatursupraleiter haben aufgrund ihrer geschichteten Kristallstruktur einen hauptsächlich zweidimensionalen Ladungstransport. Die Phasendiagramme dieser Materialien setzen sich aus Ordnungsphänomenen zusammen, die Magnetismus, Supraleitung und eine Strukturverzerrung umfassen. Das Hauptaugenmerk richtet sich auf die Reaktion der Transportkoeffizienten mit den sich ausbildenden Phasen in Vertretern der 111- und 122-Familien unter chemischer Dotierung innerhalb und außerhalb der Schichtstruktur. Mithilfe von Widerstand und magnetischer Suszeptibilität lassen sich Phasendiagramme der verschiedenen Supraleiterfamilien konstruieren. In ausgewählten Fällen werden der Hall-Koeffizient und elektrothermische Transporteffekte genutzt, um das Phasendiagramm näher zu erforschen. Der Großteil der Untersuchungen zeigt omnipräsente elektrische Ordnungsphänomene, die als nematische Phase bezeichnet werden. Die Messdaten zeigen, dass die Wärmeleitfähigkeit und der Nernst-Koeffizient dominant von Fluktuationen, die der nematischen Phase vorausgehen, beeinflusst werden. Aus den Ergebnissen der Nernst-Daten an dotiertem BaFe_2As_2 werden Schlüsse über die der nematischen Phase zugrunde liegenden Mechanismen des korrelierten Elektronensystems gezogen.
2

Thermische und elektrische Transportuntersuchungen an niederdimensionalen korrelierten Elektronensystemen

Steckel, Frank 27 October 2015 (has links)
In dieser Arbeit werden Messungen der elektrischen und thermischen Transportkoeffizienten an einem antiferromagnetisch ordnenden Iridat und FeAs-basierten Hochtemperatursupraleitern vorgestellt und analysiert. Iridate sind Materialien mit starker Spin-Bahn-Kopplung. In dem zweidimensionalen Vertreter Sr_2IrO_4 führt diese Kopplung zu isolierendem Mott-Verhalten mit gleichzeitiger antiferromagnetischer Ordnung der gekoppelten Spin-Bahn-Momente. Somit stellt Sr2IrO4 ein Modellsystem für die Untersuchung magnetischer Anregungen dieser Momente in Iridaten dar. Die Analyse der Wärmeleitfähigkeit von Sr_2IrO_4 liefert erstmals klare Hinweise auf magnetische Wärmeleitung in den Iridaten. Die extrahierte magnetische freie Weglänge gibt Aufschluss über die Streuprozesse der zum Wärmetransport beitragenden Magnonen und lässt Schlüsse über die Anregungen des gekoppelten Spin-Bahnsystems zu. Die FeAs-Hochtemperatursupraleiter haben aufgrund ihrer geschichteten Kristallstruktur einen hauptsächlich zweidimensionalen Ladungstransport. Die Phasendiagramme dieser Materialien setzen sich aus Ordnungsphänomenen zusammen, die Magnetismus, Supraleitung und eine Strukturverzerrung umfassen. Das Hauptaugenmerk richtet sich auf die Reaktion der Transportkoeffizienten mit den sich ausbildenden Phasen in Vertretern der 111- und 122-Familien unter chemischer Dotierung innerhalb und außerhalb der Schichtstruktur. Mithilfe von Widerstand und magnetischer Suszeptibilität lassen sich Phasendiagramme der verschiedenen Supraleiterfamilien konstruieren. In ausgewählten Fällen werden der Hall-Koeffizient und elektrothermische Transporteffekte genutzt, um das Phasendiagramm näher zu erforschen. Der Großteil der Untersuchungen zeigt omnipräsente elektrische Ordnungsphänomene, die als nematische Phase bezeichnet werden. Die Messdaten zeigen, dass die Wärmeleitfähigkeit und der Nernst-Koeffizient dominant von Fluktuationen, die der nematischen Phase vorausgehen, beeinflusst werden. Aus den Ergebnissen der Nernst-Daten an dotiertem BaFe_2As_2 werden Schlüsse über die der nematischen Phase zugrunde liegenden Mechanismen des korrelierten Elektronensystems gezogen.
3

Magnetism and Superconductivity in Iron-based Superconductors as Probed by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

Hammerath, Franziska 04 October 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) has been a fundamental player in the studies of superconducting materials for many decades. This local probe technique allows for the study of the static electronic properties as well as the low energy excitations of the electrons in the normal and the superconducting state. On that account it has also been widely applied to Fe-based superconductors from the very beginning of their discovery in February 2008. This dissertation comprises some of these very first NMR results, reflecting the unconventional nature of superconductivity and its strong link to magnetism in the investigated compounds LaO(1-x)F(x)FeAs and LiFeAs.
4

Magnetism and Superconductivity in Iron-based Superconductors as Probed by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

Hammerath, Franziska 15 December 2011 (has links)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) has been a fundamental player in the studies of superconducting materials for many decades. This local probe technique allows for the study of the static electronic properties as well as the low energy excitations of the electrons in the normal and the superconducting state. On that account it has also been widely applied to Fe-based superconductors from the very beginning of their discovery in February 2008. This dissertation comprises some of these very first NMR results, reflecting the unconventional nature of superconductivity and its strong link to magnetism in the investigated compounds LaO(1-x)F(x)FeAs and LiFeAs.:1. Introduction 2. Basic Principles of NMR 3. NMR in the Superconducting State 4. Iron-based Superconductors 5. Experimental Setup 6. NMR on LaO(1-x)F(x)FeAs in the Normal State 7. MR and NQR on LaO(1-x)F(x)FeAs in the Superconducting State 8. NMR and NQR on LiFeAs 9. Conclusions
5

Advanced Cluster Methods for Correlated-Electron Systems

Fischer, André 12 January 2016 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis, quantum cluster methods are used to calculate electronic properties of correlated-electron systems. A special focus lies in the determination of the ground state properties of a 3/4 filled triangular lattice within the one-band Hubbard model. At this filling, the electronic density of states exhibits a so-called van Hove singularity and the Fermi surface becomes perfectly nested, causing an instability towards a variety of spin-density-wave (SDW) and superconducting states. While chiral d+id-wave superconductivity has been proposed as the ground state in the weak coupling limit, the situation towards strong interactions is unclear. Additionally, quantum cluster methods are used here to investigate the interplay of Coulomb interactions and symmetry-breaking mechanisms within the nematic phase of iron-pnictide superconductors. The transition from a tetragonal to an orthorhombic phase is accompanied by a significant change in electronic properties, while long-range magnetic order is not established yet. The driving force of this transition may not only be phonons but also magnetic or orbital fluctuations. The signatures of these scenarios are studied with quantum cluster methods to identify the most important effects. Here, cluster perturbation theory (CPT) and its variational extention, the variational cluster approach (VCA) are used to treat the respective systems on a level beyond mean-field theory. Short-range correlations are incorporated numerically exactly by exact diagonalization (ED). In the VCA, long-range interactions are included by variational optimization of a fictitious symmetry-breaking field based on a self-energy functional approach. Due to limitations of ED, cluster sizes are limited to a small number of degrees of freedom. For the 3/4 filled triangular lattice, the VCA is performed for different cluster symmetries. A strong symmetry dependence and finite-size effects make a comparison of the results from different clusters difficult. The ground state in the weak-coupling limit is superconducting with chiral d+id-wave symmetry, in accordance to previous renormalization group approaches. In the regime of strong interactions SDW states are preferred over superconductivity and a collinaer SDW state with nonuniform spin moments on a quadrupled unit cell has the lowest grand potential. At strong coupling, inclusion of short-range quantum fluctuations turns out to favor this collinear state over the chiral phase predicted by mean-field theory. At intermediate interactions, no robust conclusion can be drawn from the results. Symmetry-breaking mechanisms within the nematic phase of the iron-pnictides are studied using a three-band model for the iron planes on a 4-site cluster. CPT allows a local breaking of the symmetry within the cluster without imposing long-range magnetic order. This is a crucial step beyond mean-field approaches to the magnetically ordered state, where such a nematic phase cannot easily be investigated. Three mechanisms are included to break the fourfold lattice symmetry down to a twofold symmetry. The effects of anisotropic magnetic couplings are compared to an orbital ordering field and anisotropic hoppings. All three mechanisms lead to similar features in the spectral density. Since the anisotropy of the hopping parameters has to be very large to obtain similar results as observed in ARPES, a phonon-driven transition is unlikely.
6

Advanced Cluster Methods for Correlated-Electron Systems

Fischer, André 27 October 2015 (has links)
In this thesis, quantum cluster methods are used to calculate electronic properties of correlated-electron systems. A special focus lies in the determination of the ground state properties of a 3/4 filled triangular lattice within the one-band Hubbard model. At this filling, the electronic density of states exhibits a so-called van Hove singularity and the Fermi surface becomes perfectly nested, causing an instability towards a variety of spin-density-wave (SDW) and superconducting states. While chiral d+id-wave superconductivity has been proposed as the ground state in the weak coupling limit, the situation towards strong interactions is unclear. Additionally, quantum cluster methods are used here to investigate the interplay of Coulomb interactions and symmetry-breaking mechanisms within the nematic phase of iron-pnictide superconductors. The transition from a tetragonal to an orthorhombic phase is accompanied by a significant change in electronic properties, while long-range magnetic order is not established yet. The driving force of this transition may not only be phonons but also magnetic or orbital fluctuations. The signatures of these scenarios are studied with quantum cluster methods to identify the most important effects. Here, cluster perturbation theory (CPT) and its variational extention, the variational cluster approach (VCA) are used to treat the respective systems on a level beyond mean-field theory. Short-range correlations are incorporated numerically exactly by exact diagonalization (ED). In the VCA, long-range interactions are included by variational optimization of a fictitious symmetry-breaking field based on a self-energy functional approach. Due to limitations of ED, cluster sizes are limited to a small number of degrees of freedom. For the 3/4 filled triangular lattice, the VCA is performed for different cluster symmetries. A strong symmetry dependence and finite-size effects make a comparison of the results from different clusters difficult. The ground state in the weak-coupling limit is superconducting with chiral d+id-wave symmetry, in accordance to previous renormalization group approaches. In the regime of strong interactions SDW states are preferred over superconductivity and a collinaer SDW state with nonuniform spin moments on a quadrupled unit cell has the lowest grand potential. At strong coupling, inclusion of short-range quantum fluctuations turns out to favor this collinear state over the chiral phase predicted by mean-field theory. At intermediate interactions, no robust conclusion can be drawn from the results. Symmetry-breaking mechanisms within the nematic phase of the iron-pnictides are studied using a three-band model for the iron planes on a 4-site cluster. CPT allows a local breaking of the symmetry within the cluster without imposing long-range magnetic order. This is a crucial step beyond mean-field approaches to the magnetically ordered state, where such a nematic phase cannot easily be investigated. Three mechanisms are included to break the fourfold lattice symmetry down to a twofold symmetry. The effects of anisotropic magnetic couplings are compared to an orbital ordering field and anisotropic hoppings. All three mechanisms lead to similar features in the spectral density. Since the anisotropy of the hopping parameters has to be very large to obtain similar results as observed in ARPES, a phonon-driven transition is unlikely.

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