Benjamin Frandsen - Zooming in on Nematic Fluctuations in Iron-based Superconductors

When Feb 08, 2019
from 03:00 PM to 04:00 PM
Where Natural Science 102
Contact Name
Contact Phone (502)-852-0915
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Speaker: Benjamin Frandsen, BYU Physics and Astronomy

Abstract: The origin and implications of nematicity in iron-based superconductors remain among the most pressing questions surrounding these fascinating materials. Recent efforts to address this topic have focused not only on the nematic phase itself, but also on the nematic fluctuations that exist outside the region of static nematicity. Pair distribution function (PDF) analysis of x-ray and neutron total scattering data is a proven method of studying local, short-range structural correlations that deviate from the average structure, such as the orthorhombic distortions associated with nematic fluctuations in the high-temperature tetragonal phase of iron-based superconductors. Focusing primarily on the representative hole-doped system (Sr,Na)Fe2As2, I will present PDF analysis that reveals a remarkably large region of nanometer-scale local orthorhombic distortions in temperature-composition space, reaching up to approximately 500 K for the parent compound and extending to high doping levels near optimal superconductivity. These results offer a rich and detailed view of nematic fluctuations in iron-based superconductors, helping guide future experimental and theoretical work.