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In Fe pnictide (Pn) superconducting materials, neither Mn- nor Cr- doping to the Fe site induces superconductivity, even though hole carriers are generated. This is in strong contrast with the superconductivity appearing when holes are introduced by alkali metal substitution on the insulating blocking layers. We investigate in detail the effects of Mn doping on magneto-transport properties in Ba(Fe$_{1-x}$Mn$_x$As)$_2$ for elucidating the intrinsic reason. The negative Hall coefficient for $x$ = 0 estimated in the low magnetic field ($B$) regime gradually increases as $x$ increases, and its sign changes to a positive one at $x$ = 0.020. Hall resistivities as well as simultaneous interpretation using the magnetoconductivity tensor including both longitudinal and transverse transport components clarify that minority holes with high mobility are generated by the Mn doping via spin density wave (SDW) transition at low temperatures, while original majority electrons and holes residing in the parabolic-like Fermi surfaces (FSs) of the semimetallic Ba(FeAs)$_2$ are negligibly affected. Present results indicate that the mechanism of hole doping in Ba(Fe$_{1-x}$Mn$_x$As)$_2$ is greatly different from that of the other superconducting FePns family.
An SDW antiferromagnetic (SDW-AF) low temperature phase transition is generally observe and the AF spin fluctuations are considered to play an important role for the superconductivity paring mechanism in FeAs superconductors. However, a similar magne tic phase transition is not observed in FeSe superconductors, which has caused considerable discussion. We report on the intrinsic electronic states of FeSe as elucidated by transport measurements under magnetic fields using a high quality single crystal. A mobility spectrum analysis, an ab initio method that does not make assumptions on the transport parameters in a multicarrier system, provides very import and clear evidence that another hidden order, most likely the symmetry broken from the tetragonal C4 symmetry to the C2 symmetry nematicity associated with the selective d-orbital splitting, exists in the case of superconducting FeSe other than the AF magnetic order spin fluctuations. The intrinsic low temperature phase in FeSe is in the almost compensated semimetallic states but is additionally accompanied by Dirac cone like ultrafast electrons $sim$ 10$^4$cm$^2$(VS)$^{-1}$ as minority carriers.
The effect of Mn substitution, acting as a magnetic impurity for Fe, on the Dirac cone was investigated in Ba(Fe$_{1-x}$Mn$_x$As)$_2$. Both magnetoresistance and Hall resistivity studies clearly indicate that the cyclotron effective mass ($m^{ast}$) of the Dirac cone is anomalously enhanced at low temperatures by the impurity, although its evolution as a function of carrier number proceeds in a conventional manner at higher temperatures. Kondo-like band renormalization induced by the magnetic impurity scattering is suggested as an explanation for this, and the anomalous mass enhancement of the Dirac fermions is discussed.
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