Fermi surface evolution and crystal-field excitations in heavy-fermion compounds probed by time-domain terahertz spectroscopy
ORAL
Abstract
In heavy-fermion (HF) compounds, the existence of heavy quasiparticles (QPs) is signaled by an enlarged Fermi volume. The energy scale for heavy QP formation is believed to be the Kondo lattice temperature. Hence, the origin of a large Fermi volume observed at temperatures much higher than the Kondo lattice temperature has recently been a controversial issue. We measure the quasiparticle weight in the HF compound CeCu6-xAux (x=0, 0.1) by time-resolved THz spectroscopy for temperatures from 2 K up to 300 K. This method distinguishes contributions from the heavy Kondo band and from the crystal-electric-field satellite bands by different THz response delay times [1,2]. We find that the formation of heavy bands is controlled by an exponentially enhanced, high-energy Kondo scale once the crystal-electric-field states become thermally occupied. We corroborate these observations by temperature-dependent, high-resolution dynamical mean-field calculations for the multi-orbital Anderson lattice model and discuss the relevance for quantum critical scenarios.
[1] C. Wetli, S. Pal, J. Kroha et al., Nature Phys., DOI: 10.1038/s41567-018-0228-3 (2018).
[2] S. Pal, C. Wetli, F. Zamani, O. Stockert, H. v. Löhneysen, M. Fiebig, J. Kroha, arXiv:1810.07412 (2018).
[1] C. Wetli, S. Pal, J. Kroha et al., Nature Phys., DOI: 10.1038/s41567-018-0228-3 (2018).
[2] S. Pal, C. Wetli, F. Zamani, O. Stockert, H. v. Löhneysen, M. Fiebig, J. Kroha, arXiv:1810.07412 (2018).
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Presenters
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Johann Kroha
Physikalisches Institut, University of Bonn
Authors
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Shovon Pal
Department of Materials, ETH Zürich
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Christoph Wetli
Department of Materials, ETH Zürich
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Farzaneh Zamani
Physikalisches Institut, University of Bonn
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Oliver Stockert
MPI-CPFS Dresden
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Hilbert v. Löhneysen
Physikalisches Institut and Inst. für Festkörperphysik, KIT Karlsruhe
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Manfred Fiebig
Department of Materials, ETH Zürich, Department of Materials, ETH Zurich
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Johann Kroha
Physikalisches Institut, University of Bonn