Direct probing of a large spin-orbit coupling in the FeSe superconducting monolayer on STO: Evidence for nontrivial topological states
Khalil Zakeri, Dominik Rau, Jasmin Jandke, Fang Yang, Wulf Wulfhekel,, Christophe Berthod

TL;DR
This study provides direct experimental evidence of strong spin-orbit coupling in FeSe monolayers on STO, suggesting the presence of nontrivial topological states that could influence high-temperature superconductivity mechanisms.
Contribution
The paper presents the first direct measurement of significant spin-orbit coupling in FeSe monolayers, highlighting its potential role in topological states and superconductivity.
Findings
Detected considerable spin asymmetry in scattering cross-section.
Developed a model incorporating SOC to explain observations.
Indicates strong SOC may lead to topological states and affect superconductivity.
Abstract
In condensed-matter physics spin-orbit coupling (SOC) is a fundamental physical interaction, which describes how the electrons' spin couples to their orbital motion. It is the source of a vast variety of fascinating phenomena in solids such as topological phases of matter, quantum spin Hall states, and many other exotic quantum states. Although in most theoretical descriptions of the phenomenon of high-temperature superconductivity SOC has been neglected, including this interaction can, in principle, revise the microscopic picture of superconductivity in these compounds. Not only the interaction leading to Cooper pairing but also the symmetry of the order parameter and the topological character of the involved states can be determined by SOC. Here by preforming energy-, momentum-, and spin-resolved spectroscopy experiments with an unprecedented resolution we demonstrate that while…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIron-based superconductors research · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Magnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials
