Abstract
Superconductivity — one of the best understood many-body problems in physics — has again become a challenge following the discovery of unconventional superconducting materials: these include heavy-fermion1, organic2 and the high-transition-temperature copper oxide3 superconductors. In conventional superconductors, the electrons form superconducting Cooper pairs in a spin-singlet state, which has zero total spin (S = 0). In principle, Cooper pairs can also form in a spin-triplet state (S = 1), analogous to the spin-triplet ‘p-wave’ state of paired neutral fermions in superfluid 3He (ref. 4). At present, the heavy-fermion compound UPt3 is the only known spin-triplet superconductor5,6, although the layered oxide superconductor Sr2RuO4 (ref. 7) is believed, on theoretical grounds8, to be a promising candidate. The most direct means of identifying the spin state of Cooper pairs is from measurements of their spin susceptibility, which can be determined by the Knight shift (as probed by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)). Here we report Knight-shift measurements of Sr2RuO2 using 17O NMR. Our results show no change in spin susceptibility on passing through the superconducting transition temperature, which provides the definitive identification of Sr2RuO4 as a spin-triplet superconductor.
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Acknowledgements
We thank K. Miyake, O. Narikiyo, M. Sigrist, K. Yamada, G.-q. Zheng and H. Tou, for discussions and comments, and T. Ando for magnetization measurements. This work was supported by the Grants-in-Aid for COE Research from the Ministry of Education, Sport, Science and Culture of Japan. One of us (H.M.) was supported by JPSJ research fellowships for young scientists.
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Ishida, K., Mukuda, H., Kitaoka, Y. et al. Spin-triplet superconductivity in Sr2RuO4 identified by 17O Knight shift. Nature 396, 658–660 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/25315
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/25315
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