In conventional BCS superconductors, the quantum condensation of superconducting electron pairs is understood as a Fermi surface instability, in which the low-energy electrons are paired by attractive interactions. Whether this explanation is still valid in high-Tc superconductors such as cuprates and iron-based superconductors remains an open question. In particular, a fundamentally different picture of the electron pairs, which are believed to be formed locally by repulsive interactions, may prevail. Here we report a high-resolution angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy study on LiFe1-x CoxAs. We reveal a large and robust superconducting gap on a band sinking below the Fermi level on Co substitution. The observed Fermi-surface-free superconducting order is also the largest over the momentum space, which rules out a proximity effect origin and indicates that the order parameter is not tied to the Fermi surface as a result of a surface instability.
CITATION STYLE
Miao, H., Qian, T., Shi, X., Richard, P., Kim, T. K., Hoesch, M., … Ding, H. (2015). Observation of strong electron pairing on bands without Fermi surfaces in LiFe1-x CoxAs. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms7056
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