4.8 Article

Electrical resistivity across a nematic quantum critical point

Journal

NATURE
Volume 567, Issue 7747, Pages 213-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-0923-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. HFML-RU/NWO
  2. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [16METL01]
  3. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/L015544/1]
  4. Innovative Areas 'Topological Material Science' from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [15H05852]
  5. KAKENHI [15H02106, 15H03688, 15KK0160, 18H01177, 18H05227]
  6. EPSRC [EP/N01085X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H02106, 15H05852, 15H03688, 18H05227, 15KK0160, 18H01177] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Correlated electron systems are highly susceptible to various forms of electronic order. By tuning the transition temperature towards absolute zero, striking deviations from conventional metallic (Fermi-liquid) behaviour can be realized. Evidence for electronic nematicity, a correlated electronic state with broken rotational symmetry, has been reported in a host of metallic systems(1-5) that exhibit this so-called quantum critical behaviour. In all cases, however, the nematicity is found to be intertwined with other forms of order, such as antiferromagnetism(5-7) or charge-densitywave order', that might themselves be responsible for the observed behaviour. The iron chalcogenide FeSe1-xSx is unique in this respect because its nematic order appears to exist in isolation(9-11), although until now, the impact of nematicity on the electronic ground state has been obscured by superconductivity. Here we use high magnetic fields to destroy the superconducting state in FeSe1-xSx and follow the evolution of the electrical resistivity across the nematic quantum critical point. Classic signatures of quantum criticality are revealed: an enhancement in the coefficient of the T-2 resistivity (due to electron-electron scattering) on approaching the critical point and, at the critical point itself, a strictly T-linear resistivity that extends over a decade in temperature T. In addition to revealing the phenomenon of nematic quantum criticality, the observation of T-linear resistivity at a nematic critical point also raises the question of whether strong nematic fluctuations play a part in the transport properties of other 'strange metals, in which T-linear resistivity is observed over an extended regime in their respective phase diagrams.

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