886 research outputs found

    Antiferromagnetic order and spin dynamics in iron-based superconductors

    Full text link
    High-transition temperature (high-TcT_c) superconductivity in the iron pnictides/chalcogenides emerges from the suppression of the static antiferromagnetic order in their parent compounds, similar to copper oxides superconductors. This raises a fundamental question concerning the role of magnetism in the superconductivity of these materials. Neutron scattering, a powerful probe to study the magnetic order and spin dynamics, plays an essential role in determining the relationship between magnetism and superconductivity in high-TcT_c superconductors. The rapid development of modern neutron time-of-flight spectrometers allows a direct determination of the spin dynamical properties of iron-based superconductors throughout the entire Brillouin zone. In this review, we present an overview of the neutron scattering results on iron-based superconductors, focusing on the evolution of spin excitation spectra as a function of electron/hole-doping and isoelectronic substitution. We compare spin dynamical properties of iron-based superconductors with those of copper oxide and heavy fermion superconductors, and discuss the common features of spin excitations in these three families of unconventional superconductors and their relationship with superconductivity.Comment: 48 pages, 41 figures. Accepted by Reviews of Modern Physic

    Magnetic Frustration and Iron-Vacancy Ordering in Iron-Chalcogenide

    Full text link
    We show that the magnetic and vacancy orders in the 122 (A1yFe2xSe2)(A_{1-y}Fe_{2-x}Se_2) iron-chalcogenides can be naturally derived from the J1J2J3J_1-J_2-J_3 model with J1J_1 being the ferromagnetic (FM) nearest neighbor exchange coupling and J2,J3J_{2}, J_3 being the antiferromagnetic (AFM) next and third nearest neighbor ones respectively, previously proposed to describe the magnetism in the 11(FeTe/Se) systems. In the 11 systems, the magnetic exchange couplings are extremely frustrated in the ordered bi-collinear antiferromagnetic state so that the magnetic transition temperature is low. In the 122 systems, the formation of iron vacancy order reduces the magnetic frustration and significantly increases the magnetic transition temperature and the ordered magnetic moment. The pattern of the 245 iron-vacancy order (5×5\sqrt{5}\times \sqrt{5}) observed in experiments is correlated to the maximum reduction of magnetic frustration. The nature of the iron-vacancy ordering may hence be electronically driven. We explore other possible vacancy patterns and magnetic orders associated with them. We also calculate the spin wave excitations and their novel features to test our model.Comment: Figures are modified and more discussion is adde

    The effect of Cr impurity to superconductivity in electron-doped BaFe2-xNixAs2

    Full text link
    We use transport and magnetization measurements to study the effect of Cr-doping to the phase diagram of the electron-doped superconducting BaFe2-xNixAs2 iron pnictides. In principle, adding Cr to electron-doped BaFe2-xNixAs2 should be equivalent to the effect of hole-doping. However, we find that Cr doping suppresses superconductivity via impurity effect, while not affecting the normal state resistivity above 100 K. We establish the phase diagram of Cr-doped BaFe2-x-yNixCryAs2 iron pnictides, and demonstrate that Cr-doping near optimal superconductivity restore the long-range antiferromagnetic order suppressed by superconductivity.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure

    Toward the Mott state with Magnetic Cluster Formation in Heavily Cu-Doped NaFe1x_{1-x}Cux_{x}As

    Full text link
    Recent neutron scattering measurements indicate that NaFe1x_{1-x}Cux_{x}As forms an antiferromagnetic stripe phase near x0.5x\approx 0.5 in a Mott insulating state. This copper concentration is well in excess of that required for superconductivity, x<0.04x < 0.04. We have investigated the development of magnetism in this compound using 23^{23}Na nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra and spin-lattice relaxation measurements performed on single crystals (xx = 0.13, 0.18, 0.24, and 0.39). We find multiple inequivalent Na sites, each of which is associated with a different number of nearest neighbor Fe sites occupied by a Cu dopant. We show that the distribution of Cu substituted for Fe is random in-plane for low concentrations (x=0.13x = 0.13 and 0.18), but deviates from this with increasing Cu doping. As is characteristic of many pnictide compounds, there is a spin pseudo gap that increases in magnitude with dopant concentration. This is correlated with a corresponding increase in orbital NMR frequency shift indicating a change in valence from Cu2+^{2+} to a Cu1+^{1+} state as xx exceeds 0.18, concomitant with the change of Fe2+^{2+} to Fe3+^{3+} resulting in the formation of magnetic clusters. However, for x0.39x\leq 0.39 there is no evidence of long-range static magnetic order.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure

    Magnons in Ferromagnetic Metallic Manganites

    Full text link
    Ferromagnetic (FM) manganites, a group of likely half-metallic oxides, are of special interest not only because they are a testing ground of the classical doubleexchange interaction mechanism for the colossal magnetoresistance, but also because they exhibit an extraordinary arena of emergent phenomena. These emergent phenomena are related to the complexity associated with strong interplay between charge, spin, orbital, and lattice. In this review, we focus on the use of inelastic neutron scattering to study the spin dynamics, mainly the magnon excitations in this class of FM metallic materials. In particular, we discussed the unusual magnon softening and damping near the Brillouin zone boundary in relatively narrow band compounds with strong Jahn-Teller lattice distortion and charge/orbital correlations. The anomalous behaviors of magnons in these compounds indicate the likelihood of cooperative excitations involving spin, lattice, as well as orbital degrees of freedom.Comment: published in J. Phys.: Cond. Matt. 20 figure

    Anisotropic resistivity of Na1δ_{1-\delta}Fe1x_{1-x}Cox_xAs

    Full text link
    Temperature-dependent resistivity is studied in single crystals of iron-arsenide superconductor Na1δ_{1-\delta}Fe1x_{1-x}Cox_xAs for electrical current directions along, ρa(T)\rho_a (T), and transverse, ρc(T)\rho_c (T), to the Fe-As layers. Doping with Co increases stability of this compound to reaction with the environment and suppresses numerous features in both ρa(T)\rho_a(T) and ρc(T)\rho_c(T) compared to the stoichiometric NaFeAs. Evolution of ρa(T)\rho_a (T) with xx follows a universal trend observed in other pnictide superconductors, exhibiting a TT-linear temperature dependence close to the optimal doping and development of T2T^2 dependence upon further doping. ρc(T)\rho_c (T) in parent compound shows a non - monotonic behavior with a crossover from non-metallic resistivity increase on cooling from room temperature down to \sim 80 K to a metallic decrease below this temperature. Both ρa(T)\rho_a (T) and ρc(T)\rho_c (T) show several correlated crossover - like features at T>T> 80 K. Despite a general trend towards more metallic behavior of inter - plane resistivity in Co-doped samples, the temperature of the crossover from insulating to metallic behavior (80 K) does not change much with doping

    Structure and composition of the superconducting phase in alkali iron selenide Ky_yFe1.6+x_{1.6+x}Se2_2

    Get PDF
    We use neutron diffraction to study the temperature evolution of the average structure and local lattice distortions in insulating and superconducting potassium iron selenide Ky_yFe1.6+x_{1.6+x}Se2_2. In the high temperature paramagnetic state, both materials have a single phase with crystal structure similar to that of the BaFe2_2As2_2 family of iron pnictides. While the insulating Ky_yFe1.6+x_{1.6+x}Se2_2 forms a 5×5\sqrt{5}\times\sqrt{5} iron vacancy ordered block antiferromagnetic (AF) structure at low-temperature, the superconducting compounds spontaneously phase separate into an insulating part with 5×5\sqrt{5}\times\sqrt{5} iron vacancy order and a superconducting phase with chemical composition of Kz_zFe2_{2}Se2_2 and BaFe2_2As2_2 structure. Therefore, superconductivity in alkaline iron selenides arises from alkali deficient Kz_zFe2_{2}Se2_2 in the matrix of the insulating block AF phase.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
    corecore