4.5 Review

Magnetism in Fe-based superconductors

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 22, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/22/20/203203

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Scientific User Facilities Division Office of Basic Energy Sciences, DOE

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In this review, we present a summary of experimental studies of magnetism in Fe-based superconductors. The doping dependent phase diagram shows strong similarities to the generic phase diagram of the cuprates. Parent compounds exhibit magnetic order together with a structural phase transition, both of which are progressively suppressed with doping, allowing superconductivity to emerge. The stripe-like spin arrangement of Fe moments in the magnetically ordered state shows identical in-plane structure for the RFeAsO (R = rare earth) and AFe(2)As(2) (A = Sr, Ca, Ba, Eu and K) parent compounds, notably different than the spin configuration of the cuprates. Interestingly, Fe1+yTe orders with a different spin order despite having very similar Fermi surface topology. Studies of the spin dynamics of the parent compounds show that the interactions are best characterized as anisotropic three-dimensional interactions. Despite the room temperature tetragonal structure, analysis of the low temperature spin waves under the assumption of a Heisenberg Hamiltonian indicates strong in-plane anisotropy with a significant next-nearest-neighbor interaction. For the superconducting state, a resonance, localized in both wavevector and energy, is observed in the spin excitation spectrum as for the cuprates. This resonance is observed at a wavevector compatible with a Fermi surface nesting instability independent of the magnetic ordering of the relevant parent compound. The resonance energy (E-r) scales with the superconducting transition temperature (T-C) as E-r similar to 4.9k(B)T(C), which is consistent with the canonical value of similar to 5k(B)T(C) observed for the cuprates. Moreover, the relationship between the resonance energy and the superconducting gap, Delta, is similar to that observed for many unconventional superconductors (E-r/2 Delta similar to 0.64).

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