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Decoupling Interfacial Contributions to the Enhanced Superconductivity in FeSe/SrTiO<sub>3</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

The discovery of greatly enhanced superconductivity at the interface between FeSe and SrTiO3 has attracted enormous interest due to the potential of enhancing superconductivity through interfacial interactions. In our previous work, we confirmed the presence of intrinsic interfacial coupling of electrons in the FeSe layer to optical phonons in the adjacent SrTiO3 substrate [1], but a clear causative connection between this phonon coupling and the apparent enhanced Tc enhancement remains unestablished. In order to better understand the true contribution of interface phonon coupling on the resultant high-Tc state, we consider a highly analogous system: alkali surface-doped FeSe films. This approach produces a controllably electron doped superconducting layer constrained to the film-vacuum interface, analogous to the FeSe/STO interface but lacking any phonon coupling effect. Here, using a simultaneous combination of in situ electrical resistivity and ARPES, we systematically explore the evolution of superconductivity as a function of surface doping concentration at this coupling-free interface. Interestingly, we observe only modest discrepancies in the superconducting Tc and high-temperature pseudogap signatures of optimally surface-doped layers in comparison to interfacial FeSe/STO films. We discuss the implications of this behavior on the broader understanding of FeSe/STO phenomenology.

[1] B.D. Faeth et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 127, 016803 (2021)

Presenters

  • Brendan D Faeth

    Cornell University

Authors

  • Brendan D Faeth

    Cornell University

  • Chad Mowers

    Cornell university, Cornell University

  • Yaoju Tarn

    Cornell university, Cornell University

  • Paul Malinowski

    Cornell, Cornell university, Cornell University

  • Shuolong Yang

    University of Chicago

  • Darrell G Schlom

    Cornell University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University

  • Kyle M Shen

    Cornell University