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Role of Doping and Disorder in the Fermi Surface Reconstruction of FeSe / SrTiO<sub>3</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Electron-doping FeSe stabilizes its superconducting state, raising Tc from around 8 K in the bulk to above 30 K. Monolayer (ML) FeSe on SrTiO3 (and other transition-metal-oxides) shows a similar or greater enhancement to Tc, accompanied by the vanishing of a Γ-centered hole pocket in the electronic band structure obtained from ARPES. Earlier work has proposed that O vacancies or excess Ti at the FeSe/STO interface could be responsible for this doping. We present calculations based on density functional theory that model the electronic structure of FeSe in the presence of disordered charge-doping impurities in the underlying Ti-O layer. This Wannier-based method allows one to disentangle the underlying cause of the doping from specifics of a given substrate-ML interface. ML FeSe behaves similarly on TiO2 and LaTiO3 as well as on substrates not containing Ti-Ox layers (e.g. FeSe/LaFeO3). We study disordered defects (interstitial cations and/or oxygen vacancies) at the FeSe / STO interface and determine their effect on the averaged-out Fermi surfaces measured by ARPES, providing direct insight into the connection between the atomic structure of this interface and the observed electronic properties that coincide with the superconducting state.

Presenters

  • Hunter Sims

    Francis Marion University

Authors

  • Hunter Sims

    Francis Marion University

  • Alexander Kellerhouse

    Francis Marion University

  • Tom Berlijn

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory