Elastoresistivity, the relation between resistivity and strain, can elucidate
subtle properties of the electronic structure of a material and is an
increasingly important tool for the study of strongly correlated materials. To
date, elastoresistivity measurements have been predominantly performed with
quasi-static (DC) strain. In this work, we demonstrate a method for using AC
strain in elastoresistivity measurements. A sample experiencing AC strain has a
time-dependent resistivity, which modulates the voltage produced by an AC
current; this effect produces time-dependent variations in resisitivity that
are directly proportional to the elastoresistivity, and which can be measured
more quickly, with less strain on the sample, and with less stringent
requirements for temperature stability than the previous DC technique. Example
measurements between 10 Hz and 3 kHz are performed on a material with a large,
well-characterized and temperature dependent elastoresistivity: the
representative iron-based superconductor BaFe1.975Co0.025As2.
These measurements yield a frequency independent elastoresistivity and
reproduce results from previous DC elastoresistivity methods to within
experimental accuracy. We emphasize that the dynamic (AC) elastoresistivity is
a distinct material-specific property that has not previously been considered.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure