Superconductivity coexisting with ferromagnetic order in RbEuFe<sub>4</sub>As<sub>4</sub> studied by scanning SQUID microscopy
ORAL
Abstract
The superconductivity coexisting with ferromagnetic order has intrigued scientists for decades. RbEuFe4As4 is one of these cases with the superconductivity in the FeAs layers and ferromagnetic order in the Eu layers. Systematic spatially resolved studies are lacking but necessary to investigate the superconductivity, ferromagnetic order, and the relation between them. We used scanning SQUID microscopy to image the in situ diamagnetic and ferromagnetic responses of RbEuFe4As4 with micrometer scale resolution in both magnetometry mode and susceptometry mode. We observed homogeneous superconductivity with Tc ~ 37 K, and unexpected and inhomogeneous double ferromagnetic transitions with Tm ~ 15 K upon cooling down. The vortices coexist with the magnetic domains below Tm, but are not rearranged in the temperature cycles through Tm. The observed spatial feature of suppressed superfluid density matches well with the inhomogeneous ferromagnetic domain structure close to Tm, which is consistent with the scenario that the ferromagnetic spin fluctuations strongly suppress the superconductivity. In our study, the ferromagnetic order in RbEuFe4As4 is not strong enough to rearrange the vortices, but the superconductivity is strongly suppressed by the magnetic fluctuations. Our results will stimulate future investigations into the physical phenomena arising from the superconducting and magnetic subsystems by scanning probes.
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Presenters
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Huiyuan Man
Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials, Stanford University, Stanford University
Authors
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Huiyuan Man
Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials, Stanford University, Stanford University
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Yusuke Iguchi
Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials, Stanford University, Stanford Univ, Stanford University
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Jinke Bao
University of Bayreuth, Argonne National Laboratory
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Duck Young Chung
Argonne National Laboratory
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Mercouri G Kanatzidis
Northwestern University
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Kathryn Moler
Department of Physics and Applied Physics, Stanford University, Stanford Univ, Stanford University, Department of Physics and Applied Physics, Stanford University, California 94305, USA