Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

Magnetoresistance in paramagnetic heavy fermion metals

D Parihari1 and N S Vidhyadhiraja2

Show affiliations


A theoretical study of magnetic field (h) effects on single-particle spectra and the transport quantities of heavy fermion metals in the paramagnetic phase is carried out. We have employed a non-perturbative local moment approach (LMA) to the asymmetric periodic Anderson model within the dynamical mean field framework. The lattice coherence scale ωL, which is proportional within the LMA to the spin-flip energy scale, and has been shown in earlier studies to be the energy scale at which crossover to single-impurity physics occurs, increases monotonically with increasing magnetic field. The many body Kondo resonance in the density of states at the Fermi level splits into two, with the splitting being proportional to the field itself. For h≥0, we demonstrate adiabatic continuity from the strongly interacting case to a corresponding non-interacting limit, thus establishing Fermi liquid behaviour for heavy fermion metals in the presence of a magnetic field. In the Kondo lattice regime, the theoretically computed magnetoresistance is found to be negative in the entire temperature range. We argue that such a result could be understood at T\gtrsim \omega
_L by field-induced suppression of spin-flip scattering and at T\lesssim \omega
_L through lattice coherence. The coherence peak in the heavy fermion resistivity diminishes and moves to higher temperatures with increasing field. Direct comparison of the theoretical results to the field dependent resistivity measurements in CeB6 yields good agreement.


PACS

72.15.Gd Galvanomagnetic and other magnetotransport effects

71.27.+a Strongly correlated electron systems; heavy fermions

72.15.Qm Scattering mechanisms and Kondo effect

75.20.Hr Local moment in compounds and alloys; Kondo effect, valence fluctuations, heavy fermions

Subjects

Condensed matter: electrical, magnetic and optical

Dates

Issue 40 (7 October 2009)

Received 14 July 2009, in final form 21 August 2009

Published 14 September 2009



  1. Magnetoresistance in paramagnetic heavy fermion metals

    D Parihari and N S Vidhyadhiraja 2009 J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 21 405602

  2. A general framework for recursive decompositions of unitary quantum evolutions

    Mehmet Dağlı et al 2008 J. Phys. A: Math. Theor. 41 155302

  3. Nanorobot architecture for medical target identification

    Adriano Cavalcanti et al 2008 Nanotechnology 19 015103

  4. Conductance of redox-active single molecular junctions: an electrochemical approach

    Zhihai Li et al 2007 Nanotechnology 18 044018

  5. Flow within a water droplet subjected to an air stream in a hydrophobic microchannel

    G Minor et al 2009 Fluid Dyn. Res. 41 045506

  6. Uniqueness of source for a class of semilinear elliptic equations

    Joseph K Myers 2009 Inverse Problems 25 065008

  7. A numerical solution of a Cauchy problem for an elliptic equation by Krylov subspaces

    Lars Eldén and Valeria Simoncini 2009 Inverse Problems 25 065002

  8. A mixture theory framework for modeling the mechanical actuation of ionic polymer metal composites

    Giovanni Del Bufalo et al 2008 Smart Mater. Struct. 17 045010

  9. The ionization of Mg by electron impact at 1000 eV studied by (e, 2e) experiments

    P Bolognesi et al 2008 J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys. 41 015201

  10. Anomalous scaling in nanopore translocation of structured heteropolymers

    Malcolm McCauley et al 2009 Phys. Biol. 6 036006

Related review articles

What's this?
View review articles related to this research to gain an insight into the key trends in this subject area. Related review articles are selected based on PACS/MSC codes, and are no more than three years old.

  1. Current trends in the physics of thermoelectric materials

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.