Anisotropic Structure of the Order Parameter in FeSe0.45Te0.55 Revealed by Angle Resolved Specific Heat
B. Zeng, G. Mu, H. Q. Luo, T. Xiang, H. Yang, L. Shan, C. Ren, I. I., Mazin, P. C. Dai, H.-H. Wen

TL;DR
This study uses angle-resolved specific heat measurements to reveal the anisotropic structure of the superconducting gap in FeSe0.45Te0.55, providing insights into its symmetry and the presence of gap minima or nodes.
Contribution
First bulk, angle-resolved specific heat measurement on an Fe-based superconductor revealing gap anisotropy and minima along specific crystallographic directions.
Findings
Observed fourfold oscillation of specific heat with magnetic field orientation.
Identified gap minima or nodes on the Fermi surface.
Results support an extended s-wave model with anisotropic gaps.
Abstract
The symmetry and structure of the superconducting gap in the Fe-based superconductors are the central issue for understanding these novel materials. So far the experimental data and theoretical models have been highly controversial. Some experiments favor two or more constant or nearly-constant gaps, others indicate strong anisotropy and yet others suggest gap zeros ("nodes"). Theoretical models also vary, suggesting that the absence or presence of the nodes depends quantitatively on the model parameters. An opinion that has gained substantial currency is that the gap structure, unlike all other known superconductors, including cuprates, may be different in different compounds within the same family. A unique method for addressing this issue, one of the very few methods that are bulk and angle-resolved, calls for measuring the electronic specific heat in a rotating magnetic field, as a…
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