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Dive into the research topics where P. J. Hirschfeld is active.

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Featured researches published by P. J. Hirschfeld.


New Journal of Physics | 2009

Near-degeneracy of several pairing channels in multiorbital models for the Fe pnictides

Siegfried Graser; Thomas A. Maier; P. J. Hirschfeld; D. J. Scalapino

Weak-coupling approaches to the pairing problem in the iron pnictide superconductors have predicted a wide variety of superconducting ground states. We argue here that this is due both to the inadequacy of certain approximations to the effective low-energy band structure, and to the natural near degeneracy of different pairing channels in superconductors with many distinct Fermi surface sheets. In particular, we review attempts to construct two-orbital effective band models, the argument for their fundamental inconsistency with the symmetry of these materials, and compare the dynamical susceptibilities of two- and five-orbital tight-binding models. We then present results for the magnetic properties, pairing interactions and pairing instabilities within a five-orbital tight-binding random phase approximation model. We discuss the robustness of these results for different dopings, interaction strengths and variations in band structures. Within the parameter space explored, an anisotropic, sign-changing s-wave (A1g) state and a (B1g) state are nearly degenerate, due to the near nesting of Fermi surface sheets.


Nature Communications | 2014

Disorder-induced topological change of the superconducting gap structure in iron pnictides

Yusuke Mizukami; M. Konczykowski; Y. Kawamoto; S. Kurata; S. Kasahara; K. Hashimoto; V. Mishra; Andreas Kreisel; Yan Wang; P. J. Hirschfeld; Y. Matsuda; T. Shibauchi

In superconductors with unconventional pairing mechanisms, the energy gap in the excitation spectrum often has nodes, which allow quasiparticle excitations at low energies. In many cases, such as in d-wave cuprate superconductors, the position and topology of nodes are imposed by the symmetry, and thus the presence of gapless excitations is protected against disorder. Here we report on the observation of distinct changes in the gap structure of iron-pnictide superconductors with increasing impurity scattering. By the successive introduction of nonmagnetic point defects into BaFe2(As(1-x)P(x))(2) crystals via electron irradiation, we find from the low-temperature penetration depth measurements that the nodal state changes to a nodeless state with fully gapped excitations. Moreover, under further irradiation the gapped state evolves into another gapless state, providing bulk evidence of unconventional sign-changing s-wave superconductivity. This demonstrates that the topology of the superconducting gap can be controlled by disorder, which is a strikingly unique feature of iron pnictides.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Superconducting gap in LiFeAs from three-dimensional spin-fluctuation pairing calculations

Yan Wang; Andreas Kreisel; P. J. Hirschfeld; V. B. Zabolotnyy; S. V. Borisenko; Bernd B "uchner; Thomas Maier; D. J. Scalapino

The lack of nesting of the electron and hole Fermi-surface sheets in the Fe-based superconductor LiFeAs, with a critical temperature of 18 K, has led to questions as to whether the origin of superconductivity in this material might be different from other Fe-based superconductors. Both angle-resolved photoemission and quasiparticle interference experiments have reported fully gapped superconducting order parameters with significant anisotropy. The system is also of interest because relatively strong correlations seem to be responsible for significant renormalization of the hole bands. Here we present calculations of the superconducting gap and pairing in the random-phase approximation using Fermi surfaces derived from measured photoemission spectra. The qualitative features of the gaps obtained in these calculations are shown to be different from previous two-dimensional theoretical works, and in good agreement with experiment on the main Fermi surface pockets. We analyze the contributions to the pairing vertex thus obtained and show that the scattering processes between electron and hole pockets that are believed to dominate the pairing in other Fe-based superconductors continue to do so in LiFeAs despite the lack of nesting, leading to gaps with anisotropic


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Emergent defect states as a source of resistivity anisotropy in the nematic phase of iron pnictides

Maria N. Gastiasoro; I. Paul; Yun Wang; P. J. Hirschfeld; Brian M. Andersen

s_pm


Physical Review B | 2014

Origin of electronic dimers in the spin-density wave phase of Fe-based superconductors

Maria N. Gastiasoro; P. J. Hirschfeld; Brian M. Andersen

structure. Some interesting differences relating to the enhanced


Physical Review B | 2015

Spin excitations in a model of FeSe with orbital ordering

Andreas Kreisel; Shantanu Mukherjee; P. J. Hirschfeld; Brian M. Andersen

d_{xy}


Physical Review B | 2015

Collective modes in superconductors with competing s - and d -wave interactions

Saurabh Maiti; P. J. Hirschfeld

orbital content of the LiFeAs Fermi surface are noted.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Model of Electronic Structure and Superconductivity in Orbitally Ordered FeSe.

Shantanu Mukherjee; Andreas Kreisel; P. J. Hirschfeld; Brian M. Andersen

We consider the role of potential scatterers in the nematic phase of Fe-based superconductors above the transition temperature to the (π, 0) magnetic state but below the orthorhombic structural transition. The anisotropic spin fluctuations in this region can be frozen by disorder, to create elongated magnetic droplets whose anisotropy grows as the magnetic transition is approached. Such states act as strong anisotropic defect potentials that scatter with much higher probability perpendicular to their length than parallel, although the actual crystal symmetry breaking is tiny. We calculate the scattering potentials, relaxation rates, and conductivity in this region and show that such emergent defect states are essential for the transport anisotropy observed in experiments.


Physical Review B | 2015

Robust determination of the superconducting gap sign structure via quasiparticle interference

P. J. Hirschfeld; D. Altenfeld; Ilya Eremin; I. I. Mazin

We investigate the emergent impurity-induced states arising from point-like scatterers in the spin-density wave phase of iron-based superconductors within a microscopic five-band model. Independent of the details of the band-structure and disorder potential, it is shown how stable magnetic (pi,pi) unidirectional nematogens are formed locally by the impurities. Interestingly, these nematogens exhibit a dimer structure in the electronic density, are directed along the antiferromagnetic a-axis, and have typical lengths of order 10 lattice constants in excellent agreement with recent scanning tunnelling experiments. These electronic dimers provide a natural explanation of the dopant-induced transport anisotropy found e.g. in the 122 iron pnictides.


Physical Review B | 2011

Inelastic neutron and x-ray scattering as probes of the sign structure of the superconducting gap in iron pnictides

Thomas A. Maier; Siegfried Graser; P. J. Hirschfeld; D. J. Scalapino

We present a theoretical study of the dynamical spin susceptibility for the intriguing Fe-based superconductor FeSe, based on a tight-binding model developed to account for the temperature-dependent band structure in this system. The model allows for orbital ordering in the

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Saurabh Maiti

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Thomas A. Maier

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Yan Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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I. I. Mazin

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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