- Main
Quantum Phase Transition of Correlated Iron-Based Superconductivity in LiFe1−xCoxAs
- Yin, Jia-Xin;
- Zhang, Songtian S;
- Dai, Guangyang;
- Zhao, Yuanyuan;
- Kreisel, Andreas;
- Macam, Gennevieve;
- Wu, Xianxin;
- Miao, Hu;
- Huang, Zhi-Quan;
- Martiny, Johannes HJ;
- Andersen, Brian M;
- Shumiya, Nana;
- Multer, Daniel;
- Litskevich, Maksim;
- Cheng, Zijia;
- Yang, Xian;
- Cochran, Tyler A;
- Chang, Guoqing;
- Belopolski, Ilya;
- Xing, Lingyi;
- Wang, Xiancheng;
- Gao, Yi;
- Chuang, Feng-Chuan;
- Lin, Hsin;
- Wang, Ziqiang;
- Jin, Changqing;
- Bang, Yunkyu;
- Hasan, M Zahid
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.123.217004Abstract
The interplay between unconventional Cooper pairing and quantum states associated with atomic scale defects is a frontier of research with many open questions. So far, only a few of the high-temperature superconductors allow this intricate physics to be studied in a widely tunable way. We use scanning tunneling microscopy to image the electronic impact of Co atoms on the ground state of the LiFe_{1-x}Co_{x}As system. We observe that impurities progressively suppress the global superconducting gap and introduce low energy states near the gap edge, with the superconductivity remaining in the strong-coupling limit. Unexpectedly, the fully opened gap evolves into a nodal state before the Cooper pair coherence is fully destroyed. Our systematic theoretical analysis shows that these new observations can be quantitatively understood by the nonmagnetic Born-limit scattering effect in an s±-wave superconductor, unveiling the driving force of the superconductor to metal quantum phase transition.
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