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91探花
Quantum oscillations

Amalia Coldea

Professor of Physics

Research theme

  • Quantum materials

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Quantum matter in high magnetic fields
amalia.coldea@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)82196
Clarendon Laboratory, room 251,265,264,166
  • About
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  • Publications

The drastic effect of the impurity scattering on the electronic and superconducting properties of Cu-doped FeSe

(2022)

Authors:

Z Zajicek, SJ Singh, H Jones, P Reiss, M Bristow, A Martin, A Gower, A McCollam, AI Coldea

Ironing out the details of unconventional superconductivity

(2022)

Authors:

Rafael M Fernandes, Amalia I Coldea, Hong Ding, Ian R Fisher, PJ Hirschfeld, Gabriel Kotliar

Iron pnictides and chalcogenides: a new paradigm for superconductivity

Nature Nature Research 601 (2022) 35-44

Authors:

Rafael M Fernandes, Amalia Coldea, Hong Ding, Ian R Fisher, Pj Hirschfeld, Gabriel Kotliar

Abstract:

Superconductivity is a remarkably widespread phenomenon that is observed in most metals cooled to very low temperatures. The ubiquity of such conventional superconductors, and the wide range of associated critical temperatures, is readily understood in terms of the well-known Bardeen鈥揅ooper鈥揝chrieffer theory. Occasionally, however, unconventional superconductors are found, such as the iron-based materials, which extend and defy this understanding in unexpected ways. In the case of the iron-based superconductors, this includes the different ways in which the presence of multiple atomic orbitals can manifest in unconventional superconductivity, giving rise to a rich landscape of gap structures that share the same dominant pairing mechanism. In addition, these materials have also led to insights into the unusual metallic state governed by the Hund鈥檚 interaction, the control and mechanisms of electronic nematicity, the impact of magnetic fluctuations and quantum criticality, and the importance of topology in correlated states. Over the fourteen years since their discovery, iron-based superconductors have proven to be a testing ground for the development of novel experimental tools and theoretical approaches, both of which have extensively influenced the wider field of quantum materials.

The drastic effect of the impurity scattering on the electronic and superconducting properties of Cu-doped FeSe

91探花 (2022)

Authors:

Amalia Coldea, Zachary Zajicek, Helen Jones, Andrew Martin, Matthew Bristow

Abstract:

These data were collected using transport, magnetotransport, torque and magnetization measurements as a function of temperature and magnetic fields on different single crystals of Cu-substituted FeSe. The data were collected either in 91探花 using a 16T PPMS magnet as well as at the High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Nijmegen. The data are in ASCII format. The data correspond to the figures presented in the paper with the same title to appear in Phys Rev B and also on https://arxiv.org/abs/2203.04624.

Unconventional localization of electrons inside of a nematic electronic phase

91探花 (2022)

Authors:

Amalia Coldea, Liam Farrar, Zachary Zajicek, Archie Morfoot, Simon Bending

Abstract:

These are magnetotransport data on devices made of thin flakes of FeSe. The data were collected in a cryostat in magnetic fields as a function of temperature and at fixed temperatures the magnetic field was ramped to the maximum value both in the CFAS lab in 91探花 and at the HMFL in Nijmegen. The magnetotransport data were collected using Hall bar geometries or a spider geometry. The data contain mainly ASCII files and the PDF figures are provided. This work is part of the publication "Unconventional localization of electrons inside of a nematic electronic phase" which will appear in PNAS 2022.

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