Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides

Unconventional superconductivity: Orbital selective pairing in iron selenides Orbital-selective pairing could explain the unusual properties observed in the unconventional superconductor iron selenide. Conventional superconductivity arises when electrons form Cooper pairs due to electron-phonon coup...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Emilian M. Nica, Rong Yu, Qimiao Si
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-05-01
Series:npj Quantum Materials
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41535-017-0027-6
id doaj-24ef94ed9dad4069bdf941603c99b66d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-24ef94ed9dad4069bdf941603c99b66d2021-04-02T16:21:23ZengNature Publishing Groupnpj Quantum Materials2397-46482017-05-01211710.1038/s41535-017-0027-6Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenidesEmilian M. Nica0Rong Yu1Qimiao Si2Department of Physics and Astronomy and Quantum Materials Institute, University of British ColumbiaDepartment of Physics, Renmin University of ChinaDepartment of Physics and Astronomy, Rice UniversityUnconventional superconductivity: Orbital selective pairing in iron selenides Orbital-selective pairing could explain the unusual properties observed in the unconventional superconductor iron selenide. Conventional superconductivity arises when electrons form Cooper pairs due to electron-phonon coupling. In some materials, however, unconventional superconductivity can arise, which is driven by electron-electron rather than electron-phonon couplings. The detailed mechanism that facilitates electron pairing in unconventional systems remains elusive but iron selenide systems could help to provide insights as they exhibit both relatively high temperature superconductivity, and also strong electron correlations. With different experiments suggesting different pairing mechanisms, however, these systems are somewhat puzzling. An international team of researchers led by Qimiao Si from Rice University now theoretically demonstrate that an orbital-selective pairing state could explain this unusual behaviour, which may also be at play in other unconventional superconductors such as heavy fermion and organic systems.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41535-017-0027-6
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emilian M. Nica
Rong Yu
Qimiao Si
spellingShingle Emilian M. Nica
Rong Yu
Qimiao Si
Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides
npj Quantum Materials
author_facet Emilian M. Nica
Rong Yu
Qimiao Si
author_sort Emilian M. Nica
title Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides
title_short Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides
title_full Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides
title_fullStr Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides
title_full_unstemmed Orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides
title_sort orbital-selective pairing and superconductivity in iron selenides
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series npj Quantum Materials
issn 2397-4648
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Unconventional superconductivity: Orbital selective pairing in iron selenides Orbital-selective pairing could explain the unusual properties observed in the unconventional superconductor iron selenide. Conventional superconductivity arises when electrons form Cooper pairs due to electron-phonon coupling. In some materials, however, unconventional superconductivity can arise, which is driven by electron-electron rather than electron-phonon couplings. The detailed mechanism that facilitates electron pairing in unconventional systems remains elusive but iron selenide systems could help to provide insights as they exhibit both relatively high temperature superconductivity, and also strong electron correlations. With different experiments suggesting different pairing mechanisms, however, these systems are somewhat puzzling. An international team of researchers led by Qimiao Si from Rice University now theoretically demonstrate that an orbital-selective pairing state could explain this unusual behaviour, which may also be at play in other unconventional superconductors such as heavy fermion and organic systems.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41535-017-0027-6
work_keys_str_mv AT emilianmnica orbitalselectivepairingandsuperconductivityinironselenides
AT rongyu orbitalselectivepairingandsuperconductivityinironselenides
AT qimiaosi orbitalselectivepairingandsuperconductivityinironselenides
_version_ 1721556744082030592