Elastocaloric evidence for symmetry breaking within the superconducting state in an optimally doped iron-based superconductor

ORAL

Abstract

The AC elastocaloric effect (ECE) is a highly sensitive, thermodynamic probe of phase transitions under uniaxial strain, directly probing the strain derivative of the entropy proximate to a transition. We report ECE measurements across optimal doping in the archetypal iron-based superconductor, Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2. The ECE signature at Tc for an overdoped sample is standard and quantitatively consistent with other thermodynamic probes. In contrast, for an optimally doped sample, ECE reveals a second thermodynamic transition close to Tc. No antiferromagnetic order is present at this doping level, and we further rule out re-entrant tetragonality as the origin of this transition using X-ray diffraction. Our observations strongly suggest a phase transition into a multicomponent superconducting state, thereby implying the presence of a sub-dominant pairing instability near optimal doping which exhibits a pronounced dependence on external strain. Our results thus motivate a re-examination of the pairing state and its relation to nematicity in this well-studied iron-based superconductor, while also demonstrating the power of ECE in uncovering strain-tuned phase diagrams of quantum materials.

*This work was supported by the Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under contract DE-AC02-76SF00515.

Presenters

  • Sayak Ghosh

    • Stanford University

Authors

  • Sayak Ghosh

    • Stanford University
  • Matthias S Ikeda

    • Stanford University
  • Anzumaan R Chakraborty

    • University of Minnesota
  • Thanapat Worasaran

    • Stanford Univ
  • Florian Theuss

    • Cornell University
  • Luciano B Peralta

    • Los Andes University
    • Cornell University
  • Pedro M Lozano

    • Argonne National Laboratory
    • Argonne National Lab
  • Jong-Woo kim

    • Argonne National Laboratory
    • Advanced Photon Source
  • Philip J Ryan

    • Argonne National Laboratory
  • Linda Ye

    • California Institute of Technology
  • Steven A Kivelson

    • Stanford University
  • Brad J Ramshaw

    • Cornell University
  • Rafael M Fernandes

    • University of Minnesota
  • Ian R Fisher

    • Stanford Univ
    • Stanford University