Fermi surface nesting induced strong pairing in iron-based superconductors


Abstract in English

The discovery of high-temperature superconductivity in iron pnictides raised the possibility of an unconventional superconducting mechanism in multiband materials. The observation of Fermi-surface(FS)-dependent nodeless superconducting gaps suggested that inter-FS interactions may play a crucial role in superconducting pairing. In the optimally hole-doped Ba$_{0.6}$K$_{0.4}$Fe$_2$As$_2$, the pairing strength is enhanced simultaneously (2$Delta$/Tc$sim$7) on the nearly nested FS pockets, i.e. the inner holelike ($alpha$) FS and the two hybridized electronlike FSs, while the pairing remains weak (2$Delta$/Tc$sim$3.6) in the poorly-nested outer hole-like ($beta$) FS. Here we report that in the electron-doped BaFe$_{1.85}$Co$_{0.15}$As$_2$ the FS nesting condition switches from the $alpha$ to the $beta$ FS due to the opposite size changes for hole- and electron-like FSs upon electron doping. The strong pairing strength (2$Delta$/Tc$sim$6) is also found to switch to the nested $beta$ FS, indicating an intimate connection between FS nesting and superconducting pairing, and strongly supporting the inter-FS pairing mechanism in the iron-based superconductors.

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