Suppression of superconductivity by anisotropic strain near a nematic quantum critical point
Invited
Abstract
In most unconventional and high-temperature superconductors, superconductivity emerges as a nearby symmetry-breaking phase is suppressed by chemical doping or pressure, leading to the belief that the fluctuations associated with the symmetry-breaking phase are beneficial, if not responsible, for the superconducting pairing. A direct test to verify this hypothesis is to observe a decrease of the superconducting critical temperature (Tc) by applying the symmetry-breaking conjugate field that suppresses the dynamic fluctuations of the competing order. Here1, using electrical transport, magnetic susceptibility, and x-ray diffraction measurements, we show that anisotropic strain, the conjugate field of nematicity, reduces the Tc of the iron pnictide superconductor Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2. For optimally doped samples we show a nearly fivefold reduction of Tc with less than one per cent of strain. This extreme sensitivity disappears as the doping is increased away from optimal. For underdoped samples, Tc becomes zero yielding a metallic ground state. In addition to providing direct evidence of the role played by the nematic fluctuations in the formation of the superconducting state, these results also demonstrate a superconductor to metal transition as a function of a clean tuning parameter in a three-dimensional system.
[1] Malinowski, P. et al. Nat. Phys. (2020).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-020-0983-9
[1] Malinowski, P. et al. Nat. Phys. (2020).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-020-0983-9
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Presenters
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Paul Malinowski
University of Washington
Authors
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Paul Malinowski
University of Washington
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Qianni Jiang
University of Washington, Department of Physics, University of Washington, Physics, University of Washington
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Joshua Sanchez
University of Washington
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Joshua Mutch
University of Washington
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Zhaoyu Liu
University of Washington
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Jian Liu
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
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Philip Ryan
Argonne National Laboratory, APS, Argonne National Laboratory
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Jong-Woo Kim
Argonne National Laboratory, APS, Argonne National Laboratory
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Jiun-Haw Chu
University of Washington, Department of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, Department of Physics, University of Washington, Physics, University of Washington