Electronic nematicity, a correlated state that spontaneously breaks rotational symmetry, is observed in several layered quantum materials. In contrast to their liquid-crystal counterparts, the nematic director cannot usually point in an arbitrary direction (XY nematics), but is locked by the crystal to discrete directions (Ising nematics), resulting in strongly anisotropic fluctuations above the transition. Here, we report on the observation of nearly isotropic XY-nematic fluctuations, via elastoresistance measurements, in hole-doped Ba1−xRbxFe2As2 iron-based superconductors. While for x = 0, the nematic director points along the in-plane diagonals of the tetragonal lattice, for x = 1, it points along the horizontal and vertical axes. Remarkably, for intermediate doping, the susceptibilities of these two symmetry-irreducible nematic channels display comparable Curie-Weiss behavior, thus revealing a nearly XY-nematic state. This opens a route to assess this elusive electronic quantum liquid-crystalline state.
CITATION STYLE
Ishida, K., Tsujii, M., Hosoi, S., Mizukami, Y., Ishida, S., Iyo, A., … Shibauchi, T. (2020). Novel electronic nematicity in heavily hole-doped iron pnictide superconductors. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(12), 6424–6429. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1909172117
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