Superconductivity and local structural correlations in Ba<sub>1-x</sub>K<sub>x</sub>BiO<sub>3</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Potassium-doped barium bismuthate (Ba1-xKxBiO3) exhibits a maximum superconducting transition temperature (Tc) of just above 30 K and was the first high-Tc oxide to be discovered. Although Ba1-xKxBiO3 is generally thought to be a conventional s-wave superconductor, the pairing mechanism is still under debate, and both electron-phonon coupling and charge-disproportionation effects may play a role. Our recent diffuse x-ray scattering measurements of the local structure, complemented by Monte Carlo modeling, demonstrated that disproportionation is absent in the metallic/superconducting doping regime [1]. Instead, this work revealed nanoscale structural correlations that break inversion symmetry, with profound implications for the electronic physics, including the pairing mechanism. Here we report on our efforts to extend the diffuse scattering measurements to temperatures below Tc and to additional doping levels. We will also describe recent complementary inelastic x-ray scattering experiments aimed at elucidating the observed structural features.

[1] S. Griffitt, M. Spaić, J. Joe, Z. Anderson, D. Zhai, M. J. Krogstad, R. Osborn, D. Pelc, and M. Greven, Nat. Commun. 14, 845 (2023)

*Work funded by the U.S. Department of Energy through the University of Minnesota Center for Quantum Materials, under Grant No. DE-SC0016371, and by the Croatian Science Foundation under UIP-2020-02-9494.

Presenters

  • Dayu Zhai

    • University of Minnesota

Authors

  • Dayu Zhai

    • University of Minnesota
  • Xing He

    • University of Minnesota
  • Siddharth S Gorregattu

    • University of Minnesota
  • Sylvia L Griffitt

    • Cornell University
  • Marin Spaić

    • University of Zagreb
  • Zachary W Anderson

    • University of Minnesota, School of Physics and Astronomy
    • University of Minnesota
  • Joseph Joe

    • University of Minnesota
  • Matthew J Krogstad

    • Argonne National Laboratory
  • Raymond Osborn

    • Argonne National Laboratory
  • Suchismita Sarker

    • Cornell University
    • Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source
    • CHESS
  • Jacob Ruff

    • Cornell University
    • Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source
  • Yong Q Cai

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Damjan Pelc

    • University of Zagreb
  • Martin Greven

    • University of Minnesota