Jiaqiang Yan
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jiaqiang Yan.
Nature Materials | 2009
Simon A. J. Kimber; A. Kreyssig; Yu−Zhong Zhang; Harald O. Jeschke; Roser Valenti; Fabiano Yokaichiya; E. Colombier; Jiaqiang Yan; Thomas C. Hansen; Tapan Chatterji; R. J. McQueeney; Paul C. Canfield; Alan I. Goldman; Dimitri N. Argyriou
The discovery of a new family of high-T(C) materials, the iron arsenides (FeAs), has led to a resurgence of interest in superconductivity. Several important traits of these materials are now apparent: for example, layers of iron tetrahedrally coordinated by arsenic are crucial structural ingredients. It is also now well established that the parent non-superconducting phases are itinerant magnets, and that superconductivity can be induced by either chemical substitution or application of pressure, in sharp contrast to the cuprate family of materials. The structure and properties of chemically substituted samples are known to be intimately linked; however, remarkably little is known about this relationship when high pressure is used to induce superconductivity in undoped compounds. Here we show that the key structural features in BaFe2As2, namely suppression of the tetragonal-to-orthorhombic phase transition and reduction in the As-Fe-As bond angle and Fe-Fe distance, show the same behaviour under pressure as found in chemically substituted samples. Using experimentally derived structural data, we show that the electronic structure evolves similarly in both cases. These results suggest that modification of the Fermi surface by structural distortions is more important than charge doping for inducing superconductivity in BaFe2As2.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Qiang Zhang; Rafael M. Fernandes; J. Lamsal; Jiaqiang Yan; Songxue Chi; Gregory S. Tucker; D.K. Pratt; Jeffrey W. Lynn; R. W. McCallum; Paul C. Canfield; Thomas A. Lograsso; A. I. Goldman; David Vaknin; Robert J. McQueeney
Inelastic neutron scattering is employed to investigate the impact of electronic nematic order on the magnetic spectra of LaFeAsO and Ba(Fe(0.953)Co(0.047))(2)As(2). These materials are ideal to study the paramagnetic-nematic state, since the nematic order, signaled by the tetragonal-to-orthorhombic transition at T(S), sets in well above the stripe antiferromagnetic ordering at T(N). We find that the temperature-dependent dynamic susceptibility displays an anomaly at T(S) followed by a sharp enhancement in the spin-spin correlation length, revealing a strong feedback effect of nematic order on the low-energy magnetic spectrum. Our findings can be consistently described by a model that attributes the structural or nematic transition to magnetic fluctuations, and unveils the key role played by nematic order in promoting the long-range stripe antiferromagnetic order in iron pnictides.
Archive | 2013
Qiang Zhang; Rafael M. Fernandes; Jiaqiang Yan; Ames Labo; Songxue Chi; David Vaknin; R. J. McQueeney
Archive | 2011
Jie Ma; Jiaqiang Yan; Souleymane Diallo; Rebecca Stevens; Anna Llobet; F. Trouw; D. L. Abernathy; Matthew Stone; R. J. McQueeney
Archive | 2010
A. Thaler; Ni Ni; Alfred Kracher; Jiaqiang Yan; Sergey L. Bud'ko; Paul C. Canfield
Archive | 2010
O. Pieper; Bella Lake; A. Daoud-Aladine; Manfred Reehuis; Toby Perring; M. Enderle; Kirrily C. Rule; Karel Prokes; Bastian Klemke; Klaus Kiefer; A. Niazi; Jiaqiang Yan; D. C. Johnston; A. Honecker
Archive | 2009
R. William McCallum; Jiaqiang Yan; G. E. Rustan; Eundeok Mun; S. Das; R. Nath; Youwen Xu; Sergey L. Bud'ko; Kevin W. Dennis; D. C. Johnston; Paul C. Canfield; Matthew J. Kramer; A. Kreyssig; T. A. Lograsso; Alan I. Goldman
Archive | 2009
Sergey L. Bud'ko; M. S. Torikachvili; Ni Ni; Jiaqiang Yan; Paul C. Canfield; G. M. Schmiedeshoff
Archive | 2009
S. Das; Y. P. Singh; R. Nath; G. E. Rustan; Alan I. Goldman; Jiaqiang Yan; A. Kreyssig; D. C. Johnston; R. William McCallum; Matthew J. Kramer
Archive | 2009
Sung K. Chang; Jiaqiang Yan; R. J. McQueeney