Publication | Open Access
Probing the Unconventional Superconducting State of LiFeAs by Quasiparticle Interference
68
Citations
23
References
2012
Year
Superconducting MaterialCharge ExcitationsEngineeringBismuth-based SuperconductorsQuasiparticle InterferenceNovel SuperconductorsVan Hove SingularitySuperconductivityQuantum MaterialsQuantum MatterSuperconducting DevicesUnusual Pairing SymmetryQuantum ScienceMajorana FermionHigh-tc SuperconductivityPhysicsAtomic PhysicsCondensed Matter TheorySolid-state PhysicHigh-temperature SuperconductivityNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsUnconventional SuperconductivityCondensed Matter PhysicsQuantum Superconductivity
A crucial step in revealing the nature of unconventional superconductivity is to investigate the symmetry of the superconducting order parameter. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy has proven a powerful technique to probe this symmetry by measuring the quasiparticle interference (QPI) which sensitively depends on the superconducting pairing mechanism. A particularly well-suited material to apply this technique is the stoichiometric superconductor LiFeAs as it features clean, charge neutral cleaved surfaces without surface states and a relatively high T(c)∼18 K. Our data reveal that in LiFeAs the quasiparticle scattering is governed by a van Hove singularity at the center of the Brillouin zone which is in stark contrast to other pnictide superconductors where nesting is crucial for both scattering and s(±) superconductivity. Indeed, within a minimal model and using the most elementary order parameters, calculations of the QPI suggest a dominating role of the holelike bands for the quasiparticle scattering. Our theoretical findings do not support the elementary singlet pairing symmetries s(++), s(±), and d wave. This brings to mind that the superconducting pairing mechanism in LiFeAs is based on an unusual pairing symmetry such as an elementary p wave (which provides optimal agreement between the experimental data and QPI simulations) or a more complex order parameter (e.g., s+id wave symmetry).
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