2014
DOI: 10.1038/nphys2870
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Visualization of electron nematicity and unidirectional antiferroic fluctuations at high temperatures in NaFeAs

Abstract: Abstract:The driving forces behind electronic nematicity in the iron pnictides remain hotly debated. We use atomic-resolution variable-temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy to provide the first direct visual evidence that local electronic nematicity and unidirectional antiferroic (stripe) fluctuations persist to temperatures almost twice the nominal structural ordering temperature in the parent pnictide NaFeAs. Low-temperature spectroscopic imaging of nematically-ordered NaFeAs shows anisotropic electron… Show more

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Cited by 179 publications
(167 citation statements)
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“…In addition, the magnitude of the anisotropy is largest when the structural distortion and the magnetism are weaker [44][45][46][47][48]. Signatures of anisotropy have also been found in other experiments [49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59][60][61][62][63][64][65]. The degeneracy of yz and zx is broken in both the magnetic and non magnetically ordered phases below the structural transition as revealed by ARPES [66][67][68] and X-ray experiments [69].…”
Section: Fig 1: (Left)mentioning
confidence: 59%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In addition, the magnitude of the anisotropy is largest when the structural distortion and the magnetism are weaker [44][45][46][47][48]. Signatures of anisotropy have also been found in other experiments [49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59][60][61][62][63][64][65]. The degeneracy of yz and zx is broken in both the magnetic and non magnetically ordered phases below the structural transition as revealed by ARPES [66][67][68] and X-ray experiments [69].…”
Section: Fig 1: (Left)mentioning
confidence: 59%
“…The opposite resistivity anisotropy has been found in a holedoped material [63]. Anisotropy has also been measured in optical conductivity [59-62, 64, 223], elastic shear modulus [49,50], Raman [51], scanning tunnelling microscopy [52][53][54], magnetic torque [55] and inelastic neutron scattering experiments [56][57][58]65]. Signatures of orbital-dependent reconstruction of electronic structure in the magnetic and non-magnetic states are found in ARPES experiments [66-68, 224, 225] and in X-ray absortion spectroscopy [69].…”
Section: Anisotropy and The Spin-orbital-lattice Entanglementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A CDW is a spatial modulation of the electron density associated with local lattice distortions. CDWs are found in a number of quasitwo-dimensional superconductors, including transition metal dichalcogenides [1], intercalated graphite [2], cuprates [3-5] and pnictides [6]. Of particular interest, largely driven by the puzzle of high temperature superconductivity, is whether charge order is competing, cooperating, or simply coexisting with superconductivity [7].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While evidence for spin nematic and orbital nematic fluctuations, even well above the ordering temperature, have been reported in the underdoped regime of iron-based superconductors [38,[54][55][56], no clear evidence for the persistence of slow fluctuations driven by nematicity has been presented for the overdoped iron-based superconductors. It is interesting to notice that the vanishing of the spin fluctuations probed by 1/T 2 is accompanied by a decrease in the amplitude of charge fluctuations of nematic character probed by inelastic Raman scattering [57], as well as by a decrease of the orbital anisotropy [58].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, we can write the field gradient probed by the nuclei as where γ is the nuclear gyromagnetic ratio. From the equation above, by taking a linewidth of 30 kHz [6], and 2a equal to few lattice steps [38,39], the internal field gradient results ∇B ∼ 10 8 G/cm. Therefore two As nuclei separated by 0.6 nm experience a Larmor frequency difference of about 4 kHz, which is much larger than the dipolar interaction, estimated from lattice sums to be ∼200 Hz.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%