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Coexisting Kondo hybridization and itinerant f -electron ferromagnetism in UGe2

  • Ioannis Giannakis
  • , Divyanshi Sar
  • , Joel Friedman
  • , Chang Jong Kang
  • , Marc Janoschek
  • , Pinaki Das
  • , Eric D. Bauer
  • , Gabriel Kotliar
  • , Pegor Aynajian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Kondo hybridization in partially filled f-electron systems conveys a significant amount of electronic states sharply near the Fermi energy leading to various instabilities from superconductivity to exotic electronic orders. UGe2 is a 5f heavy fermion system, where the Kondo hybridization is interrupted by the formation of two ferromagnetic phases below a second order transition Tc∼52K and a crossover transition Tx∼32K. These two ferromagnetic phases are concomitantly related to a spin-triplet superconductivity that only emerges and persists inside the magnetically ordered phase at high pressure. The origin of the two ferromagnetic phases and how they form within a Kondo-lattice remain ambiguous. Using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, we probe the spatial electronic states in the UGe2 as a function of temperature. We find a Kondo resonance and sharp 5f-electron states near the chemical potential that form at high temperatures above Tc in accordance with our density functionaltheory+Gutzwiller calculations. As temperature is lowered below Tc, the resonance narrows and eventually splits below Tx dumping itinerant f-electron spectral weight right at the Fermi energy. Our findings suggest a Stoner mechanism forming the highly polarized ferromagnetic phase below Tx that itself sets the stage for the emergence of unconventional superconductivity at high pressure.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberL022030
JournalPhysical Review Research
Volume4
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2022

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