Abstract
One of the greatest challenges to Landau's Fermi liquid theory - the standard theory of metals - is presented by complex materials with strong electronic correlations. In these materials, non-Fermi liquid transport and thermodynamic properties are often explained by the presence of a continuous quantum phase transition that happens at a quantum critical point (QCP). A QCP can be revealed by applying pressure, magnetic field, or changing the chemical composition. In the heavy-fermion compound CeCoIn5, the QCP is assumed to play a decisive role in defining the microscopic structure of both normal and superconducting states. However, the question of whether a QCP must be present in the material's phase diagram to induce non-Fermi liquid behavior and trigger superconductivity remains open. Here, we show that the full suppression of the field-induced QCP in CeCoIn5 by doping with Yb has surprisingly little impact on both unconventional superconductivity and non-Fermi liquid behavior. This implies that the non-Fermi liquid metallic behavior could be a new state of matter in its own right rather than a consequence of the underlying quantum phase transition.
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Hu, T., Singh, Y. P., Shu, L., Janoschek, M., Dzero, M., Maple, M. B., & Almasan, C. C. (2013). Non-Fermi liquid regimes with and without quantum criticality in Ce 1-xYbxCoIn5. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(18), 7160–7164. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1305240110
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