Tracing the electronic pairing glue in unconventional superconductors via inelastic Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy
Patrik Hlobil, Jasmin Jandke, Wulf Wulfhekel, J\"org Schmalian

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that including inelastic tunneling events in STM analysis allows direct probing of bosonic excitations, supporting the electronic pairing glue hypothesis in unconventional superconductors, especially iron-based systems.
Contribution
The authors develop an extended tunneling model incorporating inelastic processes, enabling direct identification of bosonic modes and clarifying the pairing mechanism in high-temperature superconductors.
Findings
Inelastic tunneling is crucial for interpreting STM spectra.
The model reproduces features indicating a spin gap in superconductors.
Evidence supports electronic origin of pairing in iron-based superconductors.
Abstract
The origin of Cooper pairing in high-temperature superconductors, such as the copper-oxide and iron-based system, is still under debate. High transition temperatures together with unconventional pairing states support the picture of an electronic pairing glue in the cuprates, where superconductivity is mediated by collective bosonic excitations of the electron fluid. In other materials, most importantly iron based systems with only hole or only electron pockets, the microscopic origin is hotly debated. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) has been shown to be a powerful experimental probe to detect electronic excitations and further allows to deduce some fingerprints of bosonic collective modes. Here, we demonstrate that the inclusion of inelastic tunnel events is crucial for the interpretation of tunneling spectra and allows to directly probe bosonic excitations via STM. We develop a…
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