High-temperature superconductivity from fine-tuning of Fermi-surface singularities in iron oxypnictides
A. Charnukha, D. V. Evtushinsky, C. E. Matt, N. Xu, M.Shi, and B. B\"uchner, N. D. Zhigadlo, B. Batlogg, S. V. Borisenko

TL;DR
This study shows that fine-tuning Fermi-surface singularities in iron oxypnictides correlates with high-temperature superconductivity, highlighting the importance of electronic structure in understanding pairing mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the proximity of band-edge singularities to the Fermi level is a key factor in achieving higher superconducting transition temperatures in iron-based superconductors.
Findings
Similar Fermi surface singularities found in different compounds.
Superconductivity enhancement correlates with singularity tuning.
Band-edge singularities are crucial for understanding pairing mechanisms.
Abstract
In the family of the iron-based superconductors, the FeAsO-type compounds (with being a rare-earth metal) exhibit the highest bulk superconducting transition temperatures () up to and thus hold the key to the elusive pairing mechanism. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the intrinsic electronic structure of SmFeCoAsO () is highly nontrivial and consists of multiple band-edge singularities in close proximity to the Fermi level. However, it remains unclear whether these singularities are generic to the FeAsO-type materials and if so, whether their exact topology is responsible for the aforementioned record . In this work, we use angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) to investigate the inherent electronic structure of the NdFeAsOF compound with a…
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