Critical change in the Fermi surface of iron arsenic superconductors at the onset of superconductivity
Chang Liu, Takeshi Kondo, Rafael M. Fernandes, Ari D. Palczewski, Eun, Deok Mun, Ni Ni, Alexander N. Thaler, Aaron Bostwick, Eli Rotenberg, Joerg, Schmalian, Sergey L. Bud'ko, Paul C. Canfield, and Adam Kaminski

TL;DR
This study reveals that a Lifshitz transition in the Fermi surface coincides with the onset of superconductivity in iron arsenic superconductors, highlighting the competition between magnetic order and superconductivity.
Contribution
The paper provides direct ARPES evidence linking Fermi surface topology changes to the emergence of superconductivity in iron arsenic materials, a novel insight into their phase diagram.
Findings
Fermi surface undergoes a Lifshitz transition at superconductivity onset.
Hole pockets at the Fermi level vanish with doping at the critical point.
Superconductivity coexists with magnetic order when hole pockets are present.
Abstract
The phase diagram of a correlated material is the result of a complex interplay between several degrees of freedom, providing a map of the material's behavior. One can understand (and ultimately control) the material's ground state by associating features and regions of the phase diagram, with specific physical events or underlying quantum mechanical properties. The phase diagram of the newly discovered iron arsenic high temperature superconductors is particularly rich and interesting. In the AE(Fe1-xTx)2As2 class (AE being Ca, Sr, Ba, T being transition metals), the simultaneous structural/magnetic phase transition that occurs at elevated temperature in the undoped material, splits and is suppressed by carrier doping, the suppression being complete around optimal doping. A dome of superconductivity exists with apparent equal ease in the orthorhombic / antiferromagnetic (AFM) state as…
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