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Results of thermo-electric power (S) and electrical resistivity (r) measurements are reported on NaxCoO2 compounds with x = 1.0, 0.7 and 0.6. These are single-phase compounds crystallizing in the hexagonal structure (space group P63/mmc) at room temperature. Thermo-electric power values at 300K (S300K) are, 80mV/K, 39mV/K and 37mV/K for x = 1.0, 0.7 and 0.6 samples, respectively. The samples with x=0.7 and 1.0 are metallic down to 5 K, while the x = 0.6 sample is semiconducting. The value of r300K for x = 1.0 sample is ~0.895 mW-cm and the power factor (S2/r) is = 7.04 x 10-3 W/mK2 which qualifies it as a good thermo-electric material. In x =1.0 sample, S(T) is positive throughout 300-5K temperature range and decreases monotonically to zero as temperature T= 0. In contrast, S(T) of x = 0.7 and 0.6 samples changes sign and shows negative values between 90 K and 16 K before approaching zero as T = 0. Anomalous S(T) behavior of x = 0.6 and 0.7 samples, which are coincidentally the precursor materials to the reported superconductivity in this class of materials, indicates a dramatic change in the electronic structure of these compounds on lowering the Na content.
Thermoelectric power, S(T) of the Mg1-xAlxB2 system has been measured for x = 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8 and 1.0. XRD, resistivity and magnetization measurements are also presented. It has been found that the thermoelectric power is positive for x
We show that important anomalous features of the normal-state thermoelectric power S of high-Tc materials can be understood as being caused by doping dependent short-range antiferromagnetic correlations. The theory is based on the fluctuation-exchang
Density functional theory (DFT) within the local density approximation (LDA) is used to understand the electronic properties of Na1/3CoO2 and Na1/3CoO2(H2O)4/3, which was recently found to be superconducting1. Comparing the LDA charge density of CoO2
We have measured the magnetic field (H<90 kOe) and pressure (P<10 kbar) dependence of the magnetic ordering temperature, Tmag, in single crystal samples of NaxCoO2 for a range of Na concentrations (0.60<x<0.72). We show that in zero field, Tmag remai
UCoGe is one of the few compounds showing the coexistence of ferromagnetism and superconductivity at ambient pressure. With T_Curie = 3 K and T_SC = 0.6 K it is near a quantum phase transition; the pressure needed to suppress the magnetism is slightl