22–27 Jul 2012
Embassy Suites Napa Valley
US/Pacific timezone

In-plane electronic anisotropy in the optical spectra of Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2

23 Jul 2012, 20:00
2h
Fountain Court (Embassy Suites Napa Valley)

Fountain Court

Embassy Suites Napa Valley

1075 California Boulevard, Napa, California, United States 94559
Board: 10
Poster Correlated Physics Poster Session 1

Speaker

Masamichi NAKAJIMA (Department of Physics, University of Tokyo)

Description

M. Nakajima1,2,3, S. Ishida1,2,3, K. Kihou2,3, C. H. Lee2,3, A. Iyo2,3, H. Eisaki2,3, T. Kakeshita1,3, and S. Uchida1,3 1Department of Physics, University of Tokyo 2National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology 3JST, Transformative Research-Project on Iron Pnictides The magnetostructural phase in undoped and underdoped iron-arsenide superconductors attracts much interest as the proximate phase to the superconducting phase. In this phase, both the crystal structure and the spin arrangement break the fourfold rotational symmetry, and various experimental techniques have successfully probed the in-plane anisotropy. We measured the optical spectrum of detwinned Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 (x=0, 0.02, and 0.04) using the polarized light along the crystallographic a and b axis in the orthorhombic phase. In the present work, the annealed crystals of high quality were used [1]. For x=0, in the low-temperature orthorhombic-antiferromagnetic phase, the isotropic Drude term dominates the low-energy optical conductivity spectrum, consistent with the resistivity data. Intrinsic anisotropy shows up in the higher-energy region [2]. With Co doping, the anisotropy in the high-energy region weakens, whereas the width of the Drude component contributing to the dc conductivity becomes anisotropic. This anisotropy well explains the anisotropy in the resistivity. Our results show that an anisotropic scattering rate gives rise to the dc conductivity anisotropy, suggesting that the dopant Co atom works as an anisotropic scattering center. [1] S. Ishida et al., Phys. Rev. B 84, 184514 (2011). [2] M. Nakajima et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 108, 12238 (2011).

Primary author

Masamichi NAKAJIMA (Department of Physics, University of Tokyo)

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