Muon spin rotation (𝜇SR) measurements of internal magnetic field shifts, known as the muon Knight shift, are used for determining pairing symmetries in superconductors. While this technique has been especially effective for 𝑓-electron-based heavy-fermion superconductors, it remains challenging in 𝑑-electron-based superconductors such as Sr2RuO4, where the Knight shift is intrinsically small. Here, we report high-precision muon Knight shift measurements of superconducting Sr2RuO4. We observe that using multiple pieces of crystals, a common practice in 𝜇SR measurements, induces a substantial paramagnetic shift below the superconducting transition temperature, 𝑇c, when a weak magnetic field is applied. We attribute such an unresolved paramagnetic shift to stray fields generated by neighboring diamagnetic crystals. To avoid this, one piece of crystal was used in this Letter. We experimentally determine the muon Knight shift of Sr2RuO4 in the normal state to be −116±7 ppm. By combining the observed muon Knight shift with independently determined bulk magnetization data from the same crystal used in 𝜇SR and carefully separating various contributions to the shift, we confirm a significant reduction in the spin Knight shift below 𝑇c, consistent with spin-singlet-like pairing. This result constitutes the precise muon Knight shift measurement in a 𝑑-electron-based superconductor. Our results highlight the potential of 𝜇SR as a powerful complementary technique to the established method of nuclear magnetic resonance for probing the spin susceptibility in superconductors.
Facility: SμS
Reference: H. Matsuki et al, Physical Review Letters 136, 066001 (2026)
Read full article: here