Electronic phase separation in iron selenide (Li, Fe)OHFeSe superconductor system
Yiyuan Mao, Jun Li, Yulong Huang, Jie Yuan, Zian Li, Ke Chai, Mingwei, Ma, Shunli Ni, Jinpeng Tian, Shaobo Liu, Huaxue Zhou, Fang Zhou, Jianqi Li,, Guangming Zhang, Kui Jin, Xiaoli Dong, Zhongxian Zhao

TL;DR
This study investigates the coexistence of antiferromagnetic and superconducting phases in (Li, Fe)OHFeSe, revealing electronic phase separation as a key factor in high-temperature superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides evidence for intrinsic antiferromagnetism and electronic phase separation in (Li, Fe)OHFeSe, clarifying their relationship with superconductivity and establishing a comprehensive phase diagram.
Findings
Antiferromagnetic signal is intrinsic to (Li, Fe)OHFeSe.
Coexistence of AFM and SC states due to phase separation.
Microscopic phase separation occurs in high-Tc samples.
Abstract
The phenomenon of phase separation into antiferromagnetic (AFM) and superconducting (SC) or normal-state regions has great implication for the origin of high-temperature (high-Tc) superconductivity. However, the occurrence of an intrinsic antiferromagnetism above the Tc of (Li, Fe)OHFeSe superconductor is questioned. Here we report a systematic study on a series of (Li, Fe)OHFeSe single crystal samples with Tc up to ~41 K. We observe an evident drop in the static magnetization at Tafm ~125 K, in some of the SC (Tc < ~38 K, cell parameter c < ~9.27 {\AA}) and non-SC samples. We verify that this AFM signal is intrinsic to (Li, Fe)OHFeSe. Thus, our observations indicate mesoscopic-to-macroscopic coexistence of an AFM state with the normal (below Tafm) or SC (below Tc) state in (Li, Fe)OHFeSe. We explain such coexistence by electronic phase separation, similar to that in high-Tc cuprates…
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