A team of scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE)
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Columbia Engineering, Columbia Physics
and Kyoto University has discovered an unusual form of electronic order
in a new family of unconventional superconductors. The finding,
described in the journal Nature Communications, establishes an
unexpected connection between this new group of titanium-oxypnictide
superconductors and the more familiar cuprates and iron-pnictides,
providing scientists with a whole new family of materials from which
they can gain deeper insights into the mysteries of high-temperature
superconductivity.
"Finding this new material is a bit like an archeologist finding a
new Egyptian pharaoh's tomb," said Simon Billinge, a physicist at
Brookhaven Lab and Columbia University's School of Engineering and
Applied Science, who led the research team. "As we try and solve the
mysteries behind unconventional superconductivity, we need to discover
different but related systems to give us a more complete picture of what
is going on-just as a new tomb will turn up treasures not found before,
giving a more complete picture of ancient Egyptian society."
Harnessing the power of superconductivity, or the ability of certain
materials to conduct electricity with zero energy loss, is one of the
most exciting possibilities for creating a more energy-efficient future.
But because most superconductors only work at very low
temperatures-just a few degrees above absolute zero, or -273 degrees
Celsius-they are not yet useful for everyday life. The discovery in the
1980s of "high-temperature" superconductors that work at warmer
temperatures (though still not room temperature) was a giant step
forward, offering scientists the hope that a complete understanding of
what enables these materials to carry loss-free current would help them
design new materials for everyday applications. Each new discovery of a
common theme among these materials is helping scientists unlock pieces
of the puzzle.
One of the greatest mysteries is seeking to understand how the
electrons in high-temperature superconductors interact, sometimes trying
to avoid each other and at other times pairing up-the crucial
characteristic enabling them to carry current with no resistance.
Scientists studying these materials at Brookhaven and elsewhere have
discovered special types of electronic states, such as "charge density
waves," where charges huddle to form stripes, and checkerboard patterns
of charge. Both of these break the "translational symmetry" of the
material-the repetition of sameness as you move across the surface
(e.g., moving across a checkerboard you move from white squares to black
squares).
Another pattern scientists have observed in the two most famous
classes of high-temperature superconductors is broken rotational
symmetry without a change in translational symmetry. In this case,
called nematic order, every space on the checkerboard is white, but the
shapes of the spaces are distorted from a square to a rectangle; as you
turn round and round on one space, your neighboring space is nearer or
farther depending on the direction you are facing. Having observed this
unexpected state in the cuprates and iron-pnictides, scientists were
eager to see whether this unusual electronic order would also be
observed in a new class of titanium-oxypnictide high-temperature
superconductors discovered in 2013.
"These titanium-oxypnictide compounds are structurally similar to the
other exotic superconductor systems, and they had all the telltale
signs of a broken symmetry, such as anomalies in resistivity and
thermodynamic measurements. But there was no sign of any kind of charge
density wave in any previous measurement. It was a mystery," said Emil
Bozin, whose group at Brookhaven specializes in searching for hidden
local broken symmetries. "It was a natural for us to jump on this
problem."
The team searched for the broken rotational symmetry effect, a
research question that had been raised by Tomo Uemura of Columbia, using
samples provided by his collaborators in the group of Hiroshi Kageyama
at Kyoto University. They conducted two kinds of diffraction studies:
neutron scattering experiments at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center
(LANSCE) at DOE's Los Alamos National Laboratory, and electron
diffraction experiments using a transmission electron microscope at
Brookhaven Lab.
"We used these techniques to observe the pattern formed by beams of
particles shot through powder samples of the superconductors under a
range of temperatures and other conditions to see if there's a
structural change that corresponds to the formation of this special type
of nematic state," said Ben Frandsen, a graduate student in physics at
Columbia and first author on the paper.
The experiments revealed a telltale symmetry breaking distortion at
low temperature. A collaborative effort among experimentalists and
theorists established the particular nematic nature of the order.
"Critical in this study was the fact that we could rapidly bring to
bear multiple complementary experimental methods, together with crucial
theoretical insights-something made easy by having most of the expertise
in residence at Brookhaven Lab and wonderfully strong collaborations
with colleagues at Columbia and beyond," Billinge said.
The discovery of nematicity in titanium-oxypnictides, together with
the fact that their structural and chemical properties bridge those of
the cuprate and iron-pnictide high-temperature superconductors, render
these materials an important new system to help understand the role of
electronic symmetry breaking in superconductivity.
As Billinge noted, "This new pharaoh's tomb indeed contained a treasure: nematicity."
This work was supported by the DOE Office of Science, the U.S.
National Science Foundation (NSF, OISE-0968226), the Japan Society of
the Promotion of Science, the Japan Atomic Energy Agency, and the
Friends of Todai Inc.
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