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Dive into the research topics where Sven Friedemann is active.

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Featured researches published by Sven Friedemann.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Fermi-surface collapse and dynamical scaling near a quantum-critical point

Sven Friedemann; N. Oeschler; Steffen Wirth; C. Krellner; Christoph Geibel; F. Steglich; S. Paschen; Stefan Kirchner; Qimiao Si

Quantum criticality arises when a macroscopic phase of matter undergoes a continuous transformation at zero temperature. While the collective fluctuations at quantum-critical points are being increasingly recognized as playing an important role in a wide range of quantum materials, the nature of the underlying quantum-critical excitations remains poorly understood. Here we report in-depth measurements of the Hall effect in the heavy-fermion metal YbRh2Si2, a prototypical system for quantum criticality. We isolate a rapid crossover of the isothermal Hall coefficient clearly connected to the quantum-critical point from a smooth background contribution; the latter exists away from the quantum-critical point and is detectable through our studies only over a wide range of magnetic field. Importantly, the width of the critical crossover is proportional to temperature, which violates the predictions of conventional theory and is instead consistent with an energy over temperature, E/T, scaling of the quantum-critical single-electron fluctuation spectrum. Our results provide evidence that the quantum-dynamical scaling and a critical Kondo breakdown simultaneously operate in the same material. Correspondingly, we infer that macroscopic scale-invariant fluctuations emerge from the microscopic many-body excitations associated with a collapsing Fermi-surface. This insight is expected to be relevant to the unconventional finite-temperature behavior in a broad range of strongly correlated quantum systems.


Nature | 2012

Thermal and electrical transport across a magnetic quantum critical point

Heike Pfau; Stefanie Hartmann; Ulrike Stockert; Peijie Sun; Stefan Lausberg; M. Brando; Sven Friedemann; C. Krellner; Christoph Geibel; Steffen Wirth; Stefan Kirchner; Elihu Abrahams; Qimiao Si; F. Steglich

A quantum critical point (QCP) arises when a continuous transition between competing phases occurs at zero temperature. Collective excitations at magnetic QCPs give rise to metallic properties that strongly deviate from the expectations of Landau’s Fermi-liquid description, which is the standard theory of electron correlations in metals. Central to this theory is the notion of quasiparticles, electronic excitations that possess the quantum numbers of the non-interacting electrons. Here we report measurements of thermal and electrical transport across the field-induced magnetic QCP in the heavy-fermion compound YbRh2Si2 (refs 2, 3). We show that the ratio of the thermal to electrical conductivities at the zero-temperature limit obeys the Wiedemann–Franz law for magnetic fields above the critical field at which the QCP is attained. This is also expected for magnetic fields below the critical field, where weak antiferromagnetic order and a Fermi-liquid phase form below 0.07 K (at zero field). At the critical field, however, the low-temperature electrical conductivity exceeds the thermal conductivity by about 10 per cent, suggestive of a non-Fermi-liquid ground state. This apparent violation of the Wiedemann–Franz law provides evidence for an unconventional type of QCP at which the fundamental concept of Landau quasiparticles no longer holds. These results imply that Landau quasiparticles break up, and that the origin of this disintegration is inelastic scattering associated with electronic quantum critical fluctuations—these insights could be relevant to understanding other deviations from Fermi-liquid behaviour frequently observed in various classes of correlated materials.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Interplay between Kondo suppression and Lifshitz transitions in YbRh2Si2 at high magnetic fields.

Heike Pfau; Ramzy Daou; Stefan Lausberg; H. R. Naren; M. Brando; Sven Friedemann; S. Wirth; T. Westerkamp; Ulrike Stockert; P. Gegenwart; C. Krellner; C. Geibel; Gertrud Zwicknagl; F. Steglich

We investigate the magnetic field dependent thermopower, thermal conductivity, resistivity, and Hall effect in the heavy fermion metal YbRh2Si2. In contrast to reports on thermodynamic measurements, we find in total three transitions at high fields, rather than a single one at 10 T. Using the Mott formula together with renormalized band calculations, we identify Lifshitz transitions as their origin. The predictions of the calculations show that all experimental results rely on an interplay of a smooth suppression of the Kondo effect and the spin splitting of the flat hybridized bands.


Physical Review B | 2010

Hall effect measurements and electronic structure calculations on YbRh2Si2 and its reference compounds LuRh2Si2 and YbIr2Si2

Sven Friedemann; Steffen Wirth; N. Oeschler; C. Krellner; Christoph Geibel; F. Steglich; Sam MaQuilon; Z. Fisk; S. Paschen; Gertrud Zwicknagl

Sven Friedemann, Steffen Wirth, Niels Oeschler, Cornelius Krellner, Christoph Geibel, Frank Steglich, Sam MaQuilon, Zachary Fisk, Silke Paschen, and Gertrud Zwicknagl Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids, Nöthnitzer Strasse 40, 01187 Dresden, Germany Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-4575, USA Institute of Solid State Physics, TU Vienna, Wiedner Hauptstraße 8-10, 1040 Vienna, Austria Institut für Mathematische Physik, TU Braunschweig,


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2012

Magnetism, f-electron localization and superconductivity in 122-type heavy-fermion metals

F. Steglich; J. Arndt; O. Stockert; Sven Friedemann; M. Brando; C. Klingner; C. Krellner; C. Geibel; S. Wirth; Stefan Kirchner; Qimiao Si

Both CeCu2Si2 and YbRh2Si2 crystallize in the tetragonal ThCr2Si2 crystal structure. Recent neutron-scattering results on normal-state CeCu2Si2 reveal a slowing down of the quasielastic response which complies with the scaling expected for a quantum critical point (QCP) of itinerant, i.e., three-dimensional spin-density-wave (SDW), type. This interpretation is in full agreement with the non-Fermi-liquid behavior observed in transport and thermodynamic measurements. The momentum dependence of the magnetic excitation spectrum reveals two branches of an overdamped dispersive mode whose coupling to the heavy charge carriers is strongly retarded. These overdamped spin fluctuations are considered to be the driving force for superconductivity in CeCu2Si2 (Tc = 600 mK). The weak antiferromagnet YbRh2Si2 (TN = 70 mK) exhibits a magnetic-field-induced QCP at BN = 0.06 T (B⊥c). There is no indication of superconductivity down to T = 10 mK. The magnetic QCP appears to concur with a breakdown of the Kondo effect. Doping-induced variations of the average unit-cell volume result in a detachment of the magnetic and electronic instabilities. A comparison of the properties of these isostructural compounds suggests that 3D SDW QCPs are favorable for unconventional superconductivity. The question whether a Kondo-breakdown QCP may also give rise to superconductivity, however, remains to be clarified.


Physical Review B | 2013

Ordinary and intrinsic anomalous Hall effects in Nb1−yFe2+y

Sven Friedemann; M. Brando; W. J. Duncan; A. Neubauer; Christian Pfleiderer; F. M. Grosche

The Hall effect on selected samples of the dilution series Nb1-yFe2+y is studied. Normal and anomalous contributions are observed, with positive normal Hall effect dominating at high temperatures. Consistent analysis of the anomalous contribution is only possible for Fe-rich Nb0.985Fe2.015 featuring a ferromagnetic ground state. Here, a positive normal Hall coefficient is found at all temperatures with a moderate maximum at the spin-density-wave transition. The anomalous Hall effect is consistent with an intrinsic (Berry-phase) contribution which is constant below the ordering temperature TC and continuously vanishes above TC. For stoichiometric NbFe2 and Nb-rich Nb1.01Fe1.99 - both having a spin-density-wave ground state - an additional contribution to the Hall resistivity impedes a complete analysis and indicates the need for more sophisticated models of the anomalous Hall effect in itinerant antiferromagnets.


Advances in Physics | 2012

Hall effect in heavy fermion metals

Sunil Nair; Steffen Wirth; Sven Friedemann; F. Steglich; Qimiao Si; A. J. Schofield

The heavy fermion systems present a unique platform in which strong electronic correlations give rise to a host of novel, and often competing, electronic and magnetic ground states. Amongst a number of potential experimental tools at our disposal, measurements of the Hall effect have emerged as a particularly important one in discerning the nature and evolution of the Fermi surfaces of these enigmatic metals. In this article, we present a comprehensive review of Hall effect measurements in the heavy fermion materials, and examine the success it has had in contributing to our current understanding of strongly correlated matter. Particular emphasis is placed on its utility in the investigation of quantum critical phenomena which are thought to drive many of the exotic electronic ground states in these systems. This is achieved by the description of measurements of the Hall effect across the putative zero-temperature instability in the archetypal heavy fermion metal YbRh2Si2. Using the CeMIn5 (with M=Co, Ir) family of systems as a paradigm, the influence of (antiferro-)magnetic fluctuations on the Hall effect is also illustrated. This is compared to prior Hall effect measurements in the cuprates and other strongly correlated systems to emphasize on the generality of the unusual magnetotransport in materials with non-Fermi liquid behavior.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2011

Discontinuous Hall coefficient at the quantum critical point in YbRh2Si2

Sven Friedemann; N. Oeschler; Steffen Wirth; C. Krellner; Christoph Geibel; F. Steglich; S. Paschen; Stefan Kirchner; Qimiao Si

YbRh2Si2 is a model system for quantum criticality. In particular, Hall effect measurements helped identify the unconventional nature of its quantum critical point. Here, we present a high-resolution study of the Hall effect and magnetoresistivity on samples of different quality. We find a robust crossover on top of a sample dependent linear background contribution. Our detailed analysis provides a complete characterization of the crossover in terms of its position, width, and height. Importantly, we find in the extrapolation to zero temperature a discontinuity of the Hall coefficient occurring at the quantum critical point for all samples. In particular, the height of the jump in the Hall coefficient remains finite in the limit of zero temperature. Hence, our data solidify the conclusion of a collapsing Fermi surface. Finally, we contrast our results to the smooth Hall effect evolution seen in chromium, the prototype system for a spin-density-wave quantum critical point.


Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials | 2016

Kondo destruction in heavy fermion quantum criticality and the photoemission spectrum of YbRh2Si2

S. Paschen; Sven Friedemann; Steffen Wirth; F. Steglich; Stefan Kirchner; Qimiao Si

Abstract Heavy fermion metals provide a prototype setting to study quantum criticality. Experimentally, quantum critical points have been identified and studied in a growing list of heavy fermion compounds. Theoretically, Kondo destruction has provided a means to characterize a class of unconventional quantum critical points that goes beyond the Landau framework of order-parameter fluctuations. Among the prominent evidence for such local quantum criticality have been measurements in YbRh2Si2. A rapid crossover is observed at finite temperatures in the isothermal field dependence of the Hall coefficient and other transport and thermodynamic quantities, which specifies a T * B line in the temperature (T)–magnetic field (B) phase diagram. Here, we discuss what happens when temperature is raised, by analyzing the ratio of the crossover width to the crossover position. With this ratio approaching unity at T ≳ 0.5 K , YbRh2Si2 at zero magnetic field belongs to the quantum-critical fluctuation regime, where the single-particle spectral function has significant weight at both the small and large Fermi surfaces. This implies that, in this temperature range, any measurements sensitive to the Fermi surface will also see a significant spectral weight at the large Fermi surface. The angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy experiments recently reported for YbRh2Si2 at T > 1 K are consistent with this expectation, and therefore support the association of the T * B line with the physics of Kondo destruction.


Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2011

Break Up of Heavy Fermions at an Antiferromagnetic Instability

Sven Friedemann; Steffen Wirth; Stefan Kirchner; Qimiao Si; Stefanie Hartmann; C. Krellner; C. Geibel; T. Westerkamp; M. Brando; F. Steglich

We present results of high-resolution, low-temperature measurements of the Hall coefficient, thermopower, and specific heat on stoichiometric YbRh 2 Si 2 . They support earlier conclusions of an electronic (Kondo-breakdown) quantum critical point concurring with a field induced antiferromagnetic one. We also discuss the detachment of the two instabilities under chemical pressure. Volume compression/expansion (via substituting Rh by Co/Ir) results in a stabilization/weakening of magnetic order. Moderate Ir substitution leads to a non-Fermi-liquid phase, in which the magnetic moments are neither ordered nor screened by the Kondo effect. The so-derived zero-temperature global phase diagram promises future studies to explore the nature of the Kondo breakdown quantum critical point without any interfering magnetism.

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C. Krellner

Goethe University Frankfurt

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