Imaging orbitals and defects in superconducting FeSe/SrTiO<sub>3</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Monolayer FeSe on SrTiO3 superconducts with Tc as high as 100 K, an order of magnitude enhancement over bulk FeSe. This dramatic enhancement motivates intense efforts to understand the superconducting pairing mechanism, and the crucial role of the SrTiO3 surface. Nematicity, the breaking of 4-fold rotational symmetry, has been proposed as an important factor in the phase diagram of FeSe. Atomic defects can be used to pin nematicity, and to probe the local electronic structure of the superconductor.
Here we use scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and other experimental tools to characterize SrTiO3, search for orbital nematicity in monolayer FeSe/SrTiO3, and investigate atomic-scale defects that locally influence superconductivity. From quasiparticle interference (QPI) images, we disentangle scattering intensities from the orthogonal Fe 3dxz and 3dyz bands and place an upper bound of δr ~ 20 nm on nematic domain size. Furthermore, we identify “dumbbell”-shaped atomic-scale defects as Fe vacancies.

*This work was supported by the Gordon & Betty Moore Foundation EPiQS GBMF4536, and performed in part at the Harvard University Center for Nanoscale systems, supported by the National Science Foundation under NSF ECCS award no. 1541959.

Presenters

  • Trevor Chistolini

    • Physics, Harvard University

Authors

  • Trevor Chistolini

    • Physics, Harvard University
  • Tatiana Webb

    • Physics, Harvard University
  • Harris Pirie

    • Physics, Harvard University
  • Christian Matt

    • Physics, Harvard University
  • Jason Hoffman

    • Harvard University
    • Physics, Harvard University
    • Department of Physics, Harvard University
  • Dennis Huang

    • Physics, Harvard University
  • Shiang Fang

    • Physics, Harvard University
  • Efthimios Kaxiras

    • Department of Physics, Harvard University
    • Harvard Univ
    • Harvard University
    • Physics, Harvard University
    • School of Engineering and Applied Science, Harvard University
  • Jennifer Hoffman

    • Physics, Harvard University
    • Department of Physics, Harvard University