Strain sensitivity and other experimental consequences of nematic-mediated superconductivity
· Invited
Abstract
In many unconventional superconductors, nematic quantum fluctuations are strongest where the critical temperature is highest, inviting the conjecture that nematicity plays an important role in the pairing mechanism. Recently, strontium-doped barium nickel oxide has been identified as a tunable nematic system that provides an ideal testing ground for this proposition. We therefore propose several sharp empirical tests, supported by quantitative calculations in a simple model of this material. The most stringent predictions concern experiments under uniaxial strain, which has recently emerged as a powerful tuning parameter in the study of correlated materials. Since uniaxial strain so precisely targets nematic fluctuations, such experiments may provide compelling evidence for nematic-mediated pairing in this and other materials, analogous to the isotope effect in conventional superconductors.
*SL was supported in part by a Bethe/KIC fellowship at Cornell. EB was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under grant HQMAT (grant no. 817799) and by the Israel-USA Binational Science Foundation (BSF). Theoretical studies by SL and E-AK were supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Science and Engineering under Award de-sc0018946.
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Presenters
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Samuel Lederer
- Cornell University
- University of Cologne