Author:
Liu 刘 Ruixian 瑞鲜,Nakamura Mitsutaka,Kamazawa Kazuya,Lu 鲁 Xingye 兴业
Abstract
Abstract
Antiferromagnetic spin fluctuation is regarded as the leading driving force for electron pairing in high-T
c superconductors. In iron-based superconductors, spin excitations at low energy range, especially the spin-resonance mode at E
R ∼ 5k
B
T
c, are important for understanding the superconductivity. Here, we use inelastic neutron scattering (INS) to investigate the symmetry and in-plane wave-vector dependence of low-energy spin excitations in uniaxial-strain detwinned FeSe. The low-energy spin excitations (E < 10 meV) appear mainly at
Q
= (±1, 0) in the superconducting state (T ≲ 9 K) and the nematic state (T ≲ 90 K), confirming the constant C
2 rotational symmetry and ruling out the C
4 mode at E ≈ 3 meV reported in a prior INS study. Moreover, our results reveal an isotropic spin resonance in the superconducting state, which is consistent with the s
± wave pairing symmetry. At slightly higher energy, low-energy spin excitations become highly anisotropic. The full width at half maximum of spin excitations is elongated along the transverse direction. The Q-space isotropic spin resonance and highly anisotropic low-energy spin excitations could arise from dyz
intra-orbital selective Fermi surface nesting between the hole pocket around Γ point and the electron pockets centered at M
X point.