Brian Moritz
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Brian Moritz.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
M. Yi; D. H. Lu; Jiun-Haw Chu; James G. Analytis; A. P. Sorini; A. F. Kemper; Brian Moritz; Sung-Kwan Mo; R. G. Moore; Makoto Hashimoto; Wei-Sheng Lee; Z. Hussain; T. P. Devereaux; I. R. Fisher; Zhi-Xun Shen
Nematicity, defined as broken rotational symmetry, has recently been observed in competing phases proximate to the superconducting phase in the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. Similarly, the new iron-based high-temperature superconductors exhibit a tetragonal-to-orthorhombic structural transition (i.e., a broken C4 symmetry) that either precedes or is coincident with a collinear spin density wave (SDW) transition in undoped parent compounds, and superconductivity arises when both transitions are suppressed via doping. Evidence for strong in-plane anisotropy in the SDW state in this family of compounds has been reported by neutron scattering, scanning tunneling microscopy, and transport measurements. Here, we present an angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy study of detwinned single crystals of a representative family of electron-doped iron-arsenide superconductors, Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 in the underdoped region. The crystals were detwinned via application of in-plane uniaxial stress, enabling measurements of single domain electronic structure in the orthorhombic state. At low temperatures, our results clearly demonstrate an in-plane electronic anisotropy characterized by a large energy splitting of two orthogonal bands with dominant dxz and dyz character, which is consistent with anisotropy observed by other probes. For compositions x > 0, for which the structural transition (TS) precedes the magnetic transition (TSDW), an anisotropic splitting is observed to develop above TSDW, indicating that it is specifically associated with TS. For unstressed crystals, the band splitting is observed close to TS, whereas for stressed crystals, the splitting is observed to considerably higher temperatures, revealing the presence of a surprisingly large in-plane nematic susceptibility in the electronic structure.
Physical Review B | 2010
Cheng-Chien Chen; Joseph Maciejko; A. P. Sorini; Brian Moritz; Rajiv R. P. Singh; T. P. Devereaux
A growing list of experiments show orthorhombic electronic anisotropy in the iron pnictides, in some cases at temperatures well above the spin-density-wave transition. These experiments include neutron scattering, resistivity and magnetoresistance measurements, and a variety of spectroscopies. We explore the idea that these anisotropies stem from a common underlying cause: orbital order manifest in an unequal occupation of
Physical Review B | 2009
Wanli Yang; A. P. Sorini; Cheng-Chien Chen; Brian Moritz; W. S. Lee; F. Vernay; P. Olalde-Velasco; Jonathan D. Denlinger; Bernard Delley; Jiun-Haw Chu; James G. Analytis; I. R. Fisher; Zhi-An Ren; J. Yang; W. Lu; Z.X. Zhao; J. van den Brink; Z. Hussain; Zhi-Xun Shen; T. P. Devereaux
{d}_{xz}
Nature Communications | 2012
W. S. Lee; Yi-De Chuang; R. G. Moore; Yiwen Zhu; L. Patthey; M. Trigo; D. H. Lu; Patrick S. Kirchmann; O. Krupin; M. Yi; M. C. Langner; Nils Huse; Y. Chen; Shuyun Zhou; G. Coslovich; Bernhard Huber; David A. Reis; Robert A. Kaindl; Robert W. Schoenlein; D. Doering; Peter Denes; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; S. L. Johnson; Michael Först; T. Sasagawa; Y. F. Kung; A. P. Sorini; A. F. Kemper; Brian Moritz
and
Nature Communications | 2015
Michael Sentef; Martin Claassen; A. F. Kemper; Brian Moritz; Takashi Oka; J. K. Freericks; T. P. Devereaux
{d}_{yz}
Nature Communications | 2014
Chunjing Jia; E. A. Nowadnick; Krzysztof Wohlfeld; Y. F. Kung; Cheng-Chien Chen; S. Johnston; Takami Tohyama; Brian Moritz; T. P. Devereaux
orbitals, arising from the coupled spin-orbital degrees of freedom. We emphasize the distinction between the total-orbital occupation (the integrated density of states), where the order parameter may be small and the orbital polarization near the Fermi level which can be more pronounced. We also discuss light-polarization studies of angle-resolved photoemission and demonstrate how x-ray absorption linear dichroism may be used as a method to detect an orbital-order parameter.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Inna Vishik; W. S. Lee; F. Schmitt; Brian Moritz; T. Sasagawa; S. Uchida; K. Fujita; S. Ishida; Chao Zhang; T. P. Devereaux; Z.-X. Shen
Using x-ray absorption and resonant inelastic x-ray scattering, charge dynamics at and near the Fe L edges is investigated in Fe pnictide materials, and contrasted to that measured in other Fe compounds. It is shown that the XAS and RIXS spectra for 122 and 1111 Fe pnictides are each qualitatively similar to Fe metal. Cluster diagonalization, multiplet, and density-functional calculations show that Coulomb correlations are much smaller than in the cuprates, highlighting the role of Fe metallicity and strong covalency in these materials. Best agreement with experiment is obtained using Hubbard parameters U <~;; 2eV and J ~;; 0.8eV.
Nature Materials | 2016
Z. B. Wang; S. McKeown Walker; A. Tamai; Yung Jui Wang; Z. Ristic; F. Y. Bruno; A. de la Torre; S. Riccò; N. C. Plumb; M. Shi; P. Hlawenka; J. Sánchez-Barriga; A. Varykhalov; T. K. Kim; M. Hoesch; P. D. C. King; W. Meevasana; Ulrike Diebold; J. Mesot; Brian Moritz; T. P. Devereaux; M. Radovic; F. Baumberger
The dynamics of an order parameters amplitude and phase determines the collective behaviour of novel states emerging in complex materials. Time- and momentum-resolved pump-probe spectroscopy, by virtue of measuring material properties at atomic and electronic time scales out of equilibrium, can decouple entangled degrees of freedom by visualizing their corresponding dynamics in the time domain. Here we combine time-resolved femotosecond optical and resonant X-ray diffraction measurements on charge ordered La(1.75)Sr(0.25)NiO(4) to reveal unforeseen photoinduced phase fluctuations of the charge order parameter. Such fluctuations preserve long-range order without creating topological defects, distinct from thermal phase fluctuations near the critical temperature in equilibrium. Importantly, relaxation of the phase fluctuations is found to be an order of magnitude slower than that of the order parameters amplitude fluctuations, and thus limits charge order recovery. This new aspect of phase fluctuations provides a more holistic view of the phases importance in ordering phenomena of quantum matter.
Nature Physics | 2014
Wei-Sheng Lee; James J. Lee; E. A. Nowadnick; Simon Gerber; W. Tabis; Shih Wen Huang; V. N. Strocov; E. M. Motoyama; Guichuan Yu; Brian Moritz; H. Y. Huang; R. P. Wang; Yaobo Huang; W. B. Wu; C. T. Chen; D. J. Huang; M. Greven; Thorsten Schmitt; Zhi-Xun Shen; T. P. Devereaux
Ultrafast materials science promises optical control of physical properties of solids. Continuous-wave circularly polarized laser driving was predicted to induce a light-matter coupled state with an energy gap and a quantum Hall effect, coined Floquet topological insulator. Whereas the envisioned Floquet topological insulator requires high-frequency pumping to obtain well-separated Floquet bands, a follow-up question regards the creation of Floquet-like states in graphene with realistic low-frequency laser pulses. Here we predict that short optical pulses attainable in experiments can lead to local spectral gaps and novel pseudospin textures in graphene. Pump-probe photoemission spectroscopy can track these states by measuring sizeable energy gaps and Floquet band formation on femtosecond time scales. Analysing band crossings and pseudospin textures near the Dirac points, we identify new states with optically induced nontrivial changes of sublattice mixing that leads to Berry curvature corrections of electrical transport and magnetization.
Nature Materials | 2015
Makoto Hashimoto; E. A. Nowadnick; Ruihua He; Inna Vishik; Brian Moritz; Yu He; K. Tanaka; R. G. Moore; D. H. Lu; Yoshiyuki Yoshida; Motoyuki Ishikado; T. Sasagawa; Kazuhiro Fujita; S. Ishida; Shin-ichi Uchida; H. Eisaki; Z. Hussain; T. P. Devereaux; Zhi-Xun Shen
How coherent quasiparticles emerge by doping quantum antiferromagnets is a key question in correlated electron systems, whose resolution is needed to elucidate the phase diagram of copper oxides. Recent resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) experiments in hole-doped cuprates have purported to measure high-energy collective spin excitations that persist well into the overdoped regime and bear a striking resemblance to those found in the parent compound, challenging the perception that spin excitations should weaken with doping and have a diminishing effect on superconductivity. Here we show that RIXS at the Cu L3-edge indeed provides access to the spin dynamical structure factor once one considers the full influence of light polarization. Further we demonstrate that high-energy spin excitations do not correlate with the doping dependence of Tc, while low-energy excitations depend sensitively on doping and show ferromagnetic correlations. This suggests that high-energy spin excitations are marginal to pairing in cuprate superconductors.