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Symmetry breaking via orbital-dependent reconstruction of electronic structure in uniaxially strained NaFeAs

Authors :
Zhang, Y.
He, C.
Ye, Z. R.
Jiang, J.
Chen, F.
Xu, M.
Ge, Q. Q.
Xie, B. P.
Wei, J.
Aeschlimann, M.
Cui, X. Y.
Shi, M.
Hu, J. P.
Feng, D. L.
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
arXiv, 2011.

Abstract

The superconductivity discovered in iron-pnictides is intimately related to a nematic ground state, where the C4 rotational symmetry is broken via the structural and magnetic transitions. We here study the nematicity in NaFeAs with the polarization dependent angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. A uniaxial strain was applied on the sample to overcome the twinning effect in the low temperature C2-symmetric state, and obtain a much simpler electronic structure than that of a twinned sample. We found the electronic structure undergoes an orbital-dependent reconstruction in the nematic state, primarily involving the dxy- and dyz-dominated bands. These bands strongly hybridize with each other, inducing a band splitting, while the dxz-dominated bands only exhibit an energy shift without any reconstruction. These findings suggest that the development of orbital-dependent spin polarization is likely the dominant force to drive the nematicity, while the ferro-orbital ordering between dxz and dyz orbitals can only play a minor role here.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....172bacff7abcf6e14c3509b435bdd5eb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1111.6430