Charge-Density-Wave Conductors
- 1 May 1996
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Physics Today
- Vol. 49 (5) , 42-47
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.881498
Abstract
When metals are cooled, they often undergo a phase transition to a state exhibiting a new type of order. Metals such as iron and nickel become ferromagnetic below temperatures of several hundred degrees Celsius; electron spins order to produce a net magnetization in zero field. Other metals, such as lead and aluminum, become superconductors at cryogenic temperatures; electrons form Cooper pairs of opposite spin and momentum, leading to electrical conduction with zero resistance and to expulsion of magnetic fields.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Field-Effect Modulation of Charge-Density-Wave Transport inandPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- The dynamics of spin-density wavesReviews of Modern Physics, 1994
- Collective dynamics in a model of sliding charge-density waves. I. Critical behaviorPhysical Review B, 1993
- Critical behavior of sliding charge-density waves in 4-ε dimensionsPhysical Review B, 1992
- Low Temperature Charge-Density Wave Dynamics in K0.3MoO3Physica Scripta, 1989
- Phase organizationPhysical Review Letters, 1987
- Chaotic response of Nb: Evidence for a new charge-density-wave phasePhysical Review B, 1984
- Sliding-Mode Conductivity in Nb: Observation of a Threshold Electric Field and Conduction NoisePhysical Review Letters, 1979
- Electric field depinning of charge density wavesPhysical Review B, 1979
- Electric Field Breakdown of Charge-Density-Wave—Induced Anomalies in NbPhysical Review Letters, 1976