Z. Q. Mao
Tulane University
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Featured researches published by Z. Q. Mao.
Physical Review B | 2008
Minghu Fang; H. M. Pham; B. Qian; Tijiang Liu; E. K. Vehstedt; Liu Y; Leonard Spinu; Z. Q. Mao
We report our study of the evolution of superconductivity and the phase diagram of the ternary Fe(Se1-xTex)0.82 (0≤x≤1.0) system. We discovered a superconducting phase with T c,max=14 K in the 0.3<x<1.0 range. This superconducting phase is suppressed when the sample composition approaches the end member FeTe 0.82, which exhibits an incommensurate antiferromagnetic order. We discuss the relationship between the superconductivity and magnetism of this material system in terms of recent results from neutron-scattering measurements. Our results and analyses suggest that superconductivity in this class of Fe-based compounds is associated with magnetic fluctuations and therefore may be unconventional in nature.
Physical Review Letters | 2001
Z. Q. Mao; K. D. Nelson; Rongying Jin; Y. Liu; Y. Maeno
The tunneling spectrum of the superconducting phase with Tc approximately 3.0 K has been measured in the Ru-embedded region of Sr2RuO4 using cleaved junctions. A sharp zero-bias conductance peak (ZBCP) has been observed below 3 K. All characteristics of this ZBCP suggest that it originates from Andreev surface bound states, indicating that the pairing in the 3-K phase is also non- s-wave. Below the bulk Tc of Sr2RuO4 (approximately 1.5 K), a crossover from sharp to bell-shaped ZBCP was found. This supports the theory that there is a phase transition in the 3-K phase region near the bulk Tc.
Physical Review B | 2010
Minghu Fang; Jinhu Yang; Fedor Balakirev; Y. Kohama; John Singleton; B. Qian; Z. Q. Mao; Hangdong Wang; H. Q. Yuan
We have determined the resistive upper critical field Hc2 for single crystals of the superconductor Fe1.11Te0.6Se0.4 using pulsed magnetic fields of up to 60T. A rather high zero-temperature upper critical field of mu0Hc2(0) approx 47T is obtained, in spite of the relatively low superconducting transition temperature (Tc approx 14K). Moreover, Hc2 follows an unusual temperature dependence, becoming almost independent of the magnetic field orientation as the temperature T=0. We suggest that the isotropic superconductivity in Fe1.11Te0.6Se0.4 is a consequence of its three-dimensional Fermi-surface topology. An analogous result was obtained for (Ba,K)Fe2As2, indicating that all layered iron-based superconductors exhibit generic behavior that is significantly different from that of the high-Tc cuprates.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
P. L. Cai; Jin Hu; L. P. He; J. Pan; X. C. Hong; Zhongzhi Zhang; Jinxing Zhang; Jiang Wei; Z. Q. Mao; S. Y. Li
The quantum oscillations of the magnetoresistance under ambient and high pressure have been studied for WTe2 single crystals, in which extremely large magnetoresistance was discovered recently. By analyzing the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations, four Fermi surfaces are identified, and two of them are found to persist to high pressure. The sizes of these two pockets are comparable, but show increasing difference with pressure. At 0.3 K and in 14.5 T, the magnetoresistance decreases drastically from 1.25×10(5)% under ambient pressure to 7.47×10(3)% under 23.6 kbar, which is likely caused by the relative change of Fermi surfaces. These results support the scenario that the perfect balance between the electron and hole populations is the origin of the extremely large magnetoresistance in WTe2.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
Wei Bao; Y. Qiu; Q. Huang; Mark A. Green; Pawel Zajdel; M. R. Fitzsimmons; Mikhail Zhernenkov; Sung Chang; Minghu Fang; B. Qian; E. K. Vehstedt; Jinhu Yang; H. M. Pham; Leonard Spinu; Z. Q. Mao
Magnetic spin fluctuations is one candidate to produce the bosonic modes that mediate the superconductivity in the ferrous superconductors. Up until now, all of the LaOFeAs and BaFe2As2 structure types have simple commensurate magnetic ground states, as result of nesting Fermi surfaces. This type of spin-density-wave (SDW) magnetic order is known to be vulnerable to shifts in the Fermi surface when electronic densities are altered at the superconducting compositions. Superconductivity has more recently been discovered in alpha-Fe(Te,Se), whose electronically active antifluorite planes are isostructural to the FeAs layers found in the previous ferrous superconductors and share with them the same quasi-two-dimensional electronic structure. Here we report neutron scattering studies that reveal a unique complex incommensurate antiferromagnetic order in the parent compound alpha-FeTe. When the long-range magnetic order is suppressed by the isovalent substitution of Te with Se, short-range correlations survive in the superconducting phase.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Jin Hu; Jinyu Liu; D. Graf; S. M. A Radmanesh; D. J. Adams; Alyssa Chuang; Y. L. Wang; Irinel Chiorescu; Jiang Wei; L. Spinu; Z. Q. Mao
The recent breakthrough in the discovery of Weyl fermions in monopnictide semimetals provides opportunities to explore the exotic properties of relativistic fermions in condensed matter. The chiral anomaly-induced negative magnetoresistance and π Berry phase are two fundamental transport properties associated with the topological characteristics of Weyl semimetals. Since monopnictide semimetals are multiple-band systems, resolving clear Berry phase for each Fermi pocket remains a challenge. Here we report the determination of Berry phases of multiple Fermi pockets of Weyl semimetal TaP through high field quantum transport measurements. We show our TaP single crystal has the signatures of a Weyl state, including light effective quasiparticle masses, ultrahigh carrier mobility, as well as negative longitudinal magnetoresistance. Furthermore, we have generalized the Lifshitz-Kosevich formula for multiple-band Shubnikov-de Haas (SdH) oscillations and extracted the Berry phases of π for multiple Fermi pockets in TaP through the direct fits of the modified LK formula to the SdH oscillations. In high fields, we also probed signatures of Zeeman splitting, from which the Landé g-factor is extracted.
Physical Review B | 2015
Y. L. Wang; Laxman Raju Thoutam; Zhili Xiao; Jin Hu; Shashikala G. Das; Z. Q. Mao; Jiang Wei; Ralu Divan; A. Luican-Mayer; G. W. Crabtree; W. K. Kwok
A hallmark of materials with extremely large magnetoresistance (XMR) is the transformative turn-on temperature behavior: when the applied magnetic field H is above certain value, the resistivity versus temperature ρ(T ) curve shows a minimum at a field dependent temperature T ∗, which has been interpreted as a magnetic-field-driven metal-insulator transition or attributed to an electronic structure change. Here, we demonstrate that ρ(T ) curves with turn-on behavior in the newly discovered XMR material WTe2 can be scaled as MR ∼ (H/ρ0) m with m ≈ 2 and ρ0 being the resistivity at zero field. We obtained experimentally and also derived from the observed scaling the magnetic field dependence of the turn-on temperature T ∗ ∼ (H − Hc) ν with ν ≈ 1/2, which was earlier used as evidence for a predicted metal-insulator transition. The scaling also leads to a simple quantitative expression for the resistivity ρ∗ ≈ 2ρ0 at the onset of the XMR behavior, which fits the data remarkably well. These results exclude the possible existence of a magnetic-field-driven metal-insulator transition or significant contribution of an electronic structure change to the low-temperature XMR in WTe2. This work resolves the origin of the turn-on behavior observed in several XMR materials and also provides a general route for a quantitative understanding of the temperature dependence of MR in both XMR and non-XMR materials.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
Wei Bao; Z. Q. Mao; Zhe Qu; J. W. Lynn
The laminar perovskite Ca3Ru2O7 naturally forms ferromagnetic double layers of alternating moment directions, as in the spin-valve superlattices. The mechanism of the huge magnetoresistive effect in the material has been controversial due to a lack of clear understanding of various magnetic phases and phase transitions. In this neutron diffraction study in a magnetic field, we identify four different magnetic phases in Ca3Ru2O7 and determine all first-order and second-order phase transitions between them. The spin-valve mechanism then readily explains the dominant magnetoresistive effect in Ca3Ru2O7.
Nature Physics | 2015
Jin Hu; Xue Liu; Chunlei Yue; Jinyu Liu; H. W. Zhu; J. B. He; Jiang Wei; Z. Q. Mao; L. Yu. Antipina; Zakhar I. Popov; Pavel Sorokin; T. J. Liu; P. W. Adams; S. M. A Radmanesh; L. Spinu; Heng Ji; Douglas Natelson
The extraordinary properties of two dimensional (2D) materials, such as the extremely high carrier mobility in graphene and the large direct band gaps in transition metal dichalcogenides MX2 (M = Mo or W, X = S, Se) monolayers, highlight the crucial role quantum confinement can have in producing a wide spectrum of technologically important electronic properties. Currently one of the highest priorities in the field is to search for new 2D crystalline systems with structural and electronic properties that can be exploited for device development. In this letter, we report on the unusual quantum transport properties of the 2D ternary transition metal chalcogenide - Nb3SiTe6. We show that the micaceous nature of Nb3SiTe6 allows it to be thinned down to one-unit-cell thick 2D crystals using microexfoliation technique. When the thickness of Nb3SiTe6 crystal is reduced below a few unit-cells thickness, we observed an unexpected, enhanced weak-antilocalization signature in magnetotransport. This finding provides solid evidence for the long-predicted suppression of electron-phonon interaction caused by the crossover of phonon spectrum from 3D to 2D.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Vivek Thampy; Jian Kang; J. A. Rodriguez-Rivera; Wei Bao; Andrei Savici; Jin Hu; Tijiang Liu; B. Qian; David Fobes; Z. Q. Mao; Changbo Fu; W C. Chen; Qiang Ye; R. W. Erwin; Thomas R. Gentile; Zlatko Tesanovic; C. Broholm
Using polarized and unpolarized neutron scattering, we show that interstitial Fe in superconducting Fe(1+y)Te(1-x)Se(x) induces a magnetic Friedel-like oscillation that diffracts at Q⊥=(1/2 0) and involves >50 neighboring Fe sites. The interstitial >2μ(B) moment is surrounded by compensating ferromagnetic four-spin clusters that may seed double stripe ordering in Fe(1+y)Te. A semimetallic five-band model with (1/2 1/2) Fermi surface nesting and fourfold symmetric superexchange between interstitial Fe and two in-plane nearest neighbors largely accounts for the observed diffraction.