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Two-dimensional organic superconductors studied by NMR under pressure
Authors:P Wzietek  S Lefebvre  H Mayaffre  S Brown  C Bourbonnais  D Jérome  C Mézière  P Batail
Institution:(1) Laboratoire de Physique des Solides (CNRS, U.R.A. 2), Université de Paris-Sud, F-91405 Orsay Cedex, France;(2) Centre de Recherche sur les Propriétés Physiques des Matériaux Avancés, Département de Physique, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada, J1K 2R1;(3) Laboratoire de Spectrométrie Physique, Université Joseph Fourier, BP 87, F-38402 Saint-Martin d'Heres, France;(4) Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90025, USA;(5) Institut des Matériaux Jean Rouxel, 2 rue de la Houssinière, F-44322 Nantes, France
Abstract:The (BEDT)2X family of layered superconductors is one of the largest among nearly 50 organic superconductors currently known. One of the advantages of the organic compounds as prototype materials for studying the mechanisms of superconductivity is their relatively high sensitivity to hydrostatic pressure. We review recent NMR studies of these compounds using NMR under liquid and gas pressure. We focus on the low temperature part of the phase diagram where the physics is controlled by electronic correlations leading to a competition between magnetism and superconductivity. This interplay between different ground states is shown by the observation of a pseudo-gap and antiferromagnetic fluctuations and can be finely tuned by the application of pressure. Using a gas pressure system gives the unique possibility of sweeping the pressure at low temperature. Recently we used this technique to study the AF-SC boundary and established the existence of a first order transition line between the superconducting and antiferromagnetic states. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
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