Nematic superconducting state in iron pnictides near optimal hole doping

ORAL

Abstract

Nematic order often breaks the tetragonal symmetry of iron-based superconductors~\footnote{R. M. Fernandes, A.V. Chubukov and J. Schmalian, \textbf{Nat. Phys.} 10, 97 (2014)}. It arises from regular structural transition or electronic instability in the normal phase. Recently, a nematic superconducting state was observed which is not accompanied by a symmetry breaking of tetragonal lattice or the onset of magnetic order. Measurements of the angular dependence of the in-plane magnetoresistivity of single-crystalline thin samples of Ba$_{0.5}$K$_{0.5}$Fe$_{2}$As$_{2}$ in vicinity of T$_c$ found large twofold oscillations with the rotation of the applied magnetic field in the basal plane~\footnote{ J. Li, et al., submitted to \textbf{P. N. A. S.} (2016)}. Here we present the explanation of this unusual phenomenon on the basis of microscopic description of the superconducting state of these samples. We show that the nematic superconductivity arises from the weak mixture of the quasi-degenerate s$_\pm$ and d$_{x^2-y^2}$ components of the superconducting condensate, most probably induced by a weak anisotropy of stresses inherent to single-crystalline films.

Authors

  • Liviu Chibotaru

    KU Leuven

  • Paulo Pereira

    KU Leuven

  • Jun Li

    Nanjing University

  • Victor Moshchalkov

    KU Leuven