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Spin-excitations in the superconducting states of K2Mo3As3 and K2Cr3As3 and indications of spin-triplet superconductivity

ORAL

Abstract

In the race to find new topological materials, superconductivity has found renewed interest as a potential host of the Majorana Fermion. This exotic solution to the relativistic wave-equation is predicted to arise as a quasiparticle in superconductors with either spin-triplet pairing or with topological Dirac-like dispersions in their band structure. Recently, a new family of quasi-1D superconductors A1,2M3As3 (with A= Alkali metal and M = Cr or Mo) was discovered which is proposed to exhibit both of these rather rare properties. Here, we report the results of neutron scattering studies together with first principles calculations which reveal the presence of spin-excitations in both K2Cr3As2 and K2Mo3As3 and identify them as likely resulting form Fermi surface nesting between two quasi-one-dimensional sheets of the Fermi surface. Intriguingly, while these fluctuations gap below the superconducting transition in K2Mo3As3, they do not in K2Cr3As3. Considering the features of the Fermi surfaces the relative Fermi velocities and previous work on these materials we use these observations to strengthen the case for K2Cr3As3 as a spin-triplet superconductor.

Publication: K.M. Taddei et al., arXiv:2206.11757v1 (2022)<br>

Presenters

  • Keith M Taddei

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab

Authors

  • Keith M Taddei

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab

  • BING-HUA LEI

    University of Missouri

  • Michael A Susner

    Air Force Research Lab - WPAFB

  • Hui-Fei Zhai

    Northwest University, Xi'an, China

  • Thomas J Bullard

    U. S. Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Laboratory, Ohio 45433-7251 USA, UES Inc.

  • Duminda D Sanjeew

    University of Missouri

  • Qiang Zheng

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Athena S Sefat

    Department of Energy - US

  • Songxue Chi

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Clarina dela Cruz

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Bing Lv

    University of Texas at Dallas

  • David J Singh

    University of Missouri