| Literature DB >> 25502774 |
Junfeng He1, Xu Liu1, Wenhao Zhang2, Lin Zhao1, Defa Liu1, Shaolong He1, Daixiang Mou1, Fangsen Li3, Chenjia Tang2, Zhi Li3, Lili Wang3, Yingying Peng1, Yan Liu1, Chaoyu Chen1, Li Yu1, Guodong Liu1, Xiaoli Dong1, Jun Zhang1, Chuangtian Chen4, Zuyan Xu4, Xi Chen5, Xucun Ma6, Qikun Xue7, X J Zhou8.
Abstract
In high-temperature cuprate superconductors, it is now generally agreed that superconductivity is realized by doping an antiferromagnetic Mott (charge transfer) insulator. The doping-induced insulator-to-superconductor transition has been widely observed in cuprates, which provides important information for understanding the superconductivity mechanism. In the iron-based superconductors, however, the parent compound is mostly antiferromagnetic bad metal, raising a debate on whether an appropriate starting point should go with an itinerant picture or a localized picture. No evidence of doping-induced insulator-superconductor transition (or crossover) has been reported in the iron-based compounds so far. Here, we report an electronic evidence of an insulator-superconductor crossover observed in the single-layer FeSe film grown on a SrTiO3 substrate. By taking angle-resolved photoemission measurements on the electronic structure and energy gap, we have identified a clear evolution of an insulator to a superconductor with increasing carrier concentration. In particular, the insulator-superconductor crossover in FeSe/SrTiO3 film exhibits similar behaviors to that observed in the cuprate superconductors. Our results suggest that the observed insulator-superconductor crossover may be associated with the two-dimensionality that enhances electron localization or correlation. The reduced dimensionality and the interfacial effect provide a new pathway in searching for new phenomena and novel superconductors with a high transition temperature.Entities:
Keywords: ARPES; insulator-to-superconductor crossover; single-layer FeSe/SrTiO3 films
Year: 2014 PMID: 25502774 PMCID: PMC4284572 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1414094112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205