Abstract
We have measured the angle-resolved transverse resistivity (ARTR), a sensitive indicator of electronic anisotropy, in high-quality thin films of the unconventional superconductor Sr2RuO4 grown on various substrates. The ARTR signal, heralding the electronic nematicity or a large nematic susceptibility, is present and substantial already at room temperature and grows by an order of magnitude upon cooling down to 4 K. In Sr2RuO4 films deposited on tetragonal substrates the highest-conductivity direction does not coincide with any crystallographic axis. In films deposited on orthorhombic substrates it tends to align with the shorter axis; however, the magnitude of the anisotropy stays the same despite the large lattice distortion. These are strong indications of actual or incipient electronic nematicity in Sr2RuO4
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Wu, J., Nair, H. P., Bollinger, A. T., He, X., Robinson, I., Schreiber, N. J., … Bozovic, I. (2020). Electronic nematicity in Sr2RuO4. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(20), 10654–10659. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1921713117
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