Dr.
David Parker
NRC Research Associate
Center for Computational Materials Science
Naval Research Laboratory
Tests of order parameter symmetry in the superconducting iron arsenides
Abstract:
The iron arsenide superconductors have been
extensively investigated since the original discovery by Kamihara early in
2008, with maximum Tc's exceeding 50 K. Despite this, the most basic questions
such as pairing symmetry and mechanism remain highly controversial.
In this talk, I propose two methods of ascertaining this order parameter symmetry.
The first is based upon the phase-sensitive Josephson interferometry, which
was applied to the cuprates with great success, ultimately identifying the
d-wave nature of these materials. The pnictides present great challenges to
such experiments because many pairing states proposed for the pnictides are
equivalent in the a and b directions, so that unlike in the cuprates, ab-plane
corner junctions will not be useful. Yet one can find ways to use appropriate
barrier materials to filter out the transmitted electrons so that different
directions 'see' different electrons, or design junctions for this purpose.
I will describe in detail three such possible experiments.
The second method is based upon the general discovery of a phase-diagram region
of spin density wave / superconductivity coexistence, and upon some experiments
suggesting fully gapped superconductivity. We show that such a coexistence
state necessarily leads to Fermi surface nodal behavior, where the material
is effectively 'normal' if the original pairing state is 's++' or fully symmetric
s-wave. However, in the case of the sign-changing 's+/-', no nodes would be
formed in the coexistence state so that thermodynamic and transport probes
would see exponentially activated behavior.