The presence of magnetic ions was first believed to be detrimental to superconductivity. However, unconventional superconductivity has been widely induced by doping or applying external pressure in magnetic systems such as heavy fermion, cuprate and iron-based superconductors in which magnetic fluctuations are suggested to serve as the pairing glue for Cooper pairs. The discovery of superconductivity in the magnetic compounds CrAs and MnP under high pressures has further expanded this family of superconductors and provided new platforms for investigating the interplay between magnetism and superconductivity. CrAs and MnP represent the first superconductors among the transition metal Cr-and Mn-based compounds in which the electronic states near the Fermi level are dominated by Cr/Mn 3d electrons. Shortly after their discovery, new types of Cr-based quasi-one-dimensional superconductors A 2 Cr 3 As 3 and ACr 3 As 3 (A = K, Rb, Cs or Na) were discovered at ambient pressure. The close proximity of superconductivity to magnetic instability in these systems suggests that spin fluctuations may play crucial roles in mediating the Cooper pairing. In this article we review the basic physical properties of these novel superconductors and the progress achieved in recent studies.
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