Anharmonic softening of Raman active phonons in iron-pnictides: Estimating the Fe isotope effect due to anharmonic expansion
Journal article, 2009

We present Raman measurements on the iron-pnictide superconductors CeFeAsO1-xFx and NdFeAsO1-xFx. Modeling the Fe-As plane in terms of harmonic and a cubic anharmonic Fe-As interactions, we calculate the temperature dependence of the energy and lifetime of the Raman active Fe B-1g mode and fit to the observed energy shift. The shifts and lifetimes are in good agreement with those measured also in other Raman studies which demonstrate that the phonon spectrum, at least at small wave numbers, is well represented by phonon-phonon interactions without any significant electronic contribution. Even at zero temperature there is a non-negligent effect of interactions on the phonon energy, which for the Fe B-1g mode corresponds to 6 cm(-1) or 3% of the total energy of the mode. We also estimate the anharmonic expansion from Fe (56 -> 54) isotope substitution to Delta a approximate to 5.1 x 10(-4) angstrom and Delta d(Fe-As) approximate to 2.5 x 10(-4) angstrom and the shift of harmonic zero-point fluctuations of bond lengths less than or similar to 3 x 10(-5) angstrom(2), giving a total relative average decrease in electronic hopping integrals of vertical bar delta vertical bar/t less than or similar to 2.0 x 10(-4). For a nonphonon-mediated weak-coupling superconductor this gives an isotope exponent alpha similar to 10(-2). The results pose a serious challenge for any theory of superconductivity in the pnictides that does not include electron-phonon interactions to produce a sizable Fe isotope effect.

Author

Mats Granath

University of Gothenburg

Johan Bielecki

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics

Joakim Holmlund

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics

Lars Börjesson

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics

Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics

24699950 (ISSN) 24699969 (eISSN)

Vol. 79 23 235103-

Subject Categories

Physical Sciences

Other Engineering and Technologies not elsewhere specified

Other Materials Engineering

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1103/PhysRevB.79.235103

More information

Created

10/6/2017