Evidence for Defect-induced Superconductivity up to 49 K in (Ca1-xRx)Fe2As2
L. Z. Deng (1), B. Lv (1), K. Zhao (1), F. Y. Wei (1), Y. Y. Xue (1),, Z. Wu (1), C. W. Chu (1, 2) ((1) Texas Center for Superconductivity and, Department of Physics, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, (2) Lawrence, Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California)

TL;DR
This study investigates how defects influence the high-temperature superconductivity up to 49 K in rare-earth-doped CaFe2As2, highlighting the role of defects and interfaces in enhancing Tc.
Contribution
It provides systematic evidence linking defects and inhomogeneous superconductivity to the elevated Tc in (Ca1-xRx)Fe2As2, supporting the interface-enhanced superconductivity hypothesis.
Findings
Defects are closely related to superconducting volume fraction.
Annealing suppresses superconducting volume without reducing Tc.
Defects are mainly superparamagnetic clusters with strong interactions.
Abstract
To explore the origin of the unusual non-bulk superconductivity with a Tc up to 49 K reported in the rare-earth-doped CaFe2As2 , the chemical composition, magnetization, specific heat, resistivity, and annealing effect are systematically investigated on nominal (Ca1-xRx)Fe2As2 single crystals with different x's and R = La, Ce, Pr, and Nd. All display a doping-independent Tc once superconductivity is induced, a doping-dependent low field superconducting volume fraction f, and a large magnetic anisotropy {\eta} in the superconducting state, suggesting a rather inhomogeneous superconducting state in an otherwise microscale-homogenous superconductor. The wavelength dispersive spectroscopy and specific heat show the presence of defects which are closely related to f, regardless of the R involved. The magnetism further reveals that the defects are mainly superparamagnetic clusters for R = Ce,…
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