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Superconductivity and local structural correlations in Ba<sub>1-x</sub>K<sub>x</sub>BiO<sub>3</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

The doped perovskite BaBiO3 exhibits a maximum superconducting transition temperature (Tc) of 34 K and was the first high-Tc oxide to be discovered, yet decades after its discovery the pairing mechanism is still debated, with strong electron-phonon coupling and bismuth valence/bond disproportionation possibly playing a role. Our recent diffuse x-ray scattering experiments and Monte Carlo modeling across its insulator-metal boundary revealed no evidence for either long- or short-range disproportionation, which resolves a major conundrum, as disproportionation and the related polaronic effects are likely not relevant for the metallic and superconducting states [1]. Instead, this work revealed nanoscale structural correlations that break inversion symmetry, which has far-reaching implications for the electronic physics, including the pairing mechanism. Here I will report our efforts to build on this work through diffuse scattering experiments at additional doping levels as well as charge transport and nonlinear magnetic response measurements of the normal and superconducting states.

Publication: [1] S. Griffitt, M. Spaic, J. Joe, Z. Anderson, D. Zhai, M. J. Krogstad, R. Osborn, D. Pelc, and M. Greven, arXiv:2209.01361 (2022)

Presenters

  • Dayu Zhai

    University of Minnesota

Authors

  • Dayu Zhai

    University of Minnesota

  • Sylvia L Griffitt

    University of Minnesota, Cornell University

  • Marin Spai?

    Univ of Zagreb

  • Zachary W Anderson

    University of Minnesota

  • Siddharth Gorregattu

    University of Minnesota

  • Xing He

    University of Minnesota

  • Joseph Joe

    University of Minnesota, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

  • Matthew J Krogstad

    Argonne National Laboratory, Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Raymond Osborn

    Argonne National Laboratory, Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Damjan Pelc

    Univ of Zagreb, University of Minnesota

  • Martin Greven

    University of Minnesota