Magnetism and Charge Dynamics in Iron Pnictides
Z. P. Yin, K. Haule, G. Kotliar

TL;DR
This paper uses first principles calculations to elucidate the magnetic and electronic properties of iron pnictides, revealing their intermediate magnetic nature and connecting various experimental observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive first-principles analysis that explains magnetic moments, optical conductivity, and electronic anisotropy in iron pnictides, bridging experimental and theoretical insights.
Findings
Magnetic moment matches experimental values
Predicted optical conductivity anisotropy
Magnetic phase driven by Hund's rule energy gain
Abstract
In a wide variety of materials, such as copper oxides, heavy fermions, organic salts, and the recently discovered iron pnictides, superconductivity is found in close proximity to a magnetically ordered state. The character of the proximate magnetic phase is thus believed to be crucial for understanding the differences between the various families of unconventional superconductors and the mechanism of superconductivity. Unlike the AFM order in cuprates, the nature of the magnetism and of the underlying electronic state in the iron pnictide superconductors is not well understood. Neither density functional theory nor models based on atomic physics and superexchange, account for the small size of the magnetic moment. Many low energy probes such as transport, STM and ARPES measured strong anisotropy of the electronic states akin to the nematic order in a liquid crystal, but there is no…
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