Visualizing superconductivity mediated by nematic fluctuations in the Fe-based superconductor FeSe<sub>1-x</sub>S<sub>x</sub>: Part 1
ORAL
Abstract
The FeSe1-xSx system presents an ideal platform for studies of intertwined nematicity and superconductivity, a topic of ongoing interest in Fe-based superconductors, due to the lack of magnetic ground state at ambient pressure. In the parent compound FeSe, the superconductivity, mediated by spin fluctuations, coexists with a nematic phase. S-substitution (x) in FeSe1-xSx suppresses the nematic phase at the quantum critical point (QCP), xc~0.17, where nematic fluctuations become largest. The pairing mechanism in the x>xc regime is undetermined, presenting an ideal test for theoretically-predicted superconductivity mediated by nematic fluctuations.
In this two-part talk, we present the first direct experimental evidence of superconductivity mediated by nematic fluctuations through our sub-Kelvin scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/S) studies on FeSe0.81S0.19. Here, in Part 1, we visualize the superconducting gap momentum-structure near the Γ-point via quasiparticle interference (QPI) measurements. Constructing the angular dependence of the Fermi surface QPI signal, we find a striking change in the gap symmetry, with gap minima rotated 45° compared to that of xc samples, demonstrating a fundamental change of the pairing mechanism across the phase diagram of FeSe1-xSx.
In this two-part talk, we present the first direct experimental evidence of superconductivity mediated by nematic fluctuations through our sub-Kelvin scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/S) studies on FeSe0.81S0.19. Here, in Part 1, we visualize the superconducting gap momentum-structure near the Γ-point via quasiparticle interference (QPI) measurements. Constructing the angular dependence of the Fermi surface QPI signal, we find a striking change in the gap symmetry, with gap minima rotated 45° compared to that of xc samples, demonstrating a fundamental change of the pairing mechanism across the phase diagram of FeSe1-xSx.
*We acknowledge support by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. DMR-2034345.
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Publication: P. K. Nag, K. Scott, et al., Superconductivity Mediated by Nematic Fluctuations in Tetragonal FeSe1−xSx (manuscript in preparation)
Presenters
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Kirsty Scott
- Yale University