Iron-based superconductor
Iron-based superconductors are iron-containing chemical compounds whose superconducting properties were discovered in 2006. The first of such superconducting compounds belong to the group of oxypnictides, which was known since 1995. Until 2006, however, they were in the first stages of experimentation and implementation and only the semiconductive properties of these compounds were known and patented. Scientific American described subsequent research as follows:
Previously most high-temperature superconductors were cuprates containing copper - oxygen layers. Much of the interest in iron-based superconductors is precisely because of the differences from the cuprates, which may help lead to a theory of non-BCS-theory superconductivity.
Iron-based superconductors of the group of oxypnictides were initially called ferropnictides. The crystal structure of these compounds displays conducting layers of iron and a pnictogen and phosphorus ) separated by a charge-reservoir block. It has also been found that some iron chalcogens and crystallogens superconduct.
Iron-based superconductors are classified according to their crystal structure and chemical formula into the following main families,
- 1111-type, with representative compounds LaFePO, LaFeAsO, SmFeAsO, PrFeAsO, and LaFeSiH.
- 111-type such as LiFeAs, NaFeAs, and LiFeP.
- 11-type FeSe
- 122-type such as BaFe2As2, SrFe2As2 and CaFe2As2
Undoped β-FeSe is the simplest iron-based superconductor but with distinct properties. It has a critical temperature (Tc) of 8 K at normal pressure, and 36.7 K under high pressure and by means of intercalation. The combination of both intercalation and higher pressure results in re-emerging superconductivity at Tc of up to 48 K.
Compared with other families, the synthesis of the 122 compounds is relatively easy which facilitates the investigation of these systems.
| Oxypnictide | Tc |
| LaO0.89F0.11FeAs | 26 |
| LaO0.9F0.2FeAs | 28.5 |
| CeFeAsO0.84F0.16 | 41 |
| SmFeAsO0.9F0.1 | 43 |
| La0.5Y0.5FeAsO0.6 | 43.1 |
| NdFeAsO0.89F0.11 | 52 |
| PrFeAsO0.89F0.11 | 52 |
| ErFeAsO1−y | 45 |
| Al-32522 | 30, 16.6 |
| Al-42622 | 28.3, 17.2 |
| GdFeAsO0.85 | 53.5 |
| BaFe1.8Co0.2As2 | 25.3 |
| SmFeAsO~0.85 |
| Non-oxypnictide | Tc |
| Ba0.6K0.4Fe2As2 | 38 |
| Ca0.6Na0.4Fe2As2 | 26 |
| CaFe0.9Co0.1AsF | 22 |
| Sr0.5Sm0.5FeAsF | 56 |
| LiFeAs | 18 |
| NaFeAs | 9–25 |
| FeSe | <27 |
| LaFeSiH | 11 |
Compounds such as Sr2ScFePO3 discovered in 2009 are referred to as the '42622' family, as FePSr2ScO3. Noteworthy is the synthesis of using high-pressure synthesis technique. Al-42622 exhibit superconductivity for both Pn = As and P with the transition temperatures of 28.3 K and 17.1 K, respectively. The a-lattice parameters of Al-42622 are smallest among the iron-pnictide superconductors. Correspondingly, Al-42622 has the smallest As–Fe–As bond angle and the largest As distance from the Fe planes. High-pressure technique also yields, the first reported iron-based superconductors with the perovskite-based '32522' structure. The transition temperature is 30.2 K for Pn = As and 16.6 K for Pn = P. The emergence of superconductivity is ascribed to the small tetragonal a-axis lattice constant of these materials. From these results, an empirical relationship was established between the a-axis lattice constant and Tc in iron-based superconductors.
In 2009, it was shown that undoped iron pnictides had a magnetic quantum critical point deriving from competition between electronic localization and itinerancy.
Properties
Similarly to superconducting cuprates, the properties of iron based superconductors change dramatically with doping. Parent compounds of FeSC are usually metals but, similarly to cuprates, are ordered antiferromagnetically that often termed as a spin-density wave. Some parent compounds superconduct. Otherwise, superconductivity emerges upon either hole or electron doping. In general, the phase diagram is similar to the cuprates.Superconducting transition temperatures are listed in the tables. BaFe1.8Co0.2As2 is predicted to have an upper critical field of 43 tesla from the measured coherence length of 2.8 nm.
In 2011, Japanese scientists made a discovery which increased a metal compound's superconductivity by immersing iron-based compounds in hot alcoholic beverages such as red wine. Earlier reports indicated that excess Fe is the cause of the bicollinear antiferromagnetic order and is not in favor of superconductivity. Further investigation revealed that weak acid has the ability to deintercalate the excess Fe from the interlayer sites. Therefore, weak acid annealing suppresses the antiferromagnetic correlation by deintercalating the excess Fe and, hence superconductivity is achieved.
There is an empirical correlation of the transition temperature with electronic band structure: the Tc maximum is observed when some of the Fermi surface stays in proximity to Lifshitz topological transition. Similar correlation has been later reported for high-Tc cuprates that indicates possible similarity of the superconductivity mechanisms in these two families of high temperature superconductors.