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Spin-excitation anisotropy in the nematic state of detwinned FeSe

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arxiv 2108.04484 v2 pith:ALIZFQVF submitted 2021-08-10 cond-mat.supr-con cond-mat.str-el

Spin-excitation anisotropy in the nematic state of detwinned FeSe

classification cond-mat.supr-con cond-mat.str-el
keywords anisotropyfeseexcitationsmathbfnematicmagnetictemperaturetransition
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The origin of the electronic nematicity in FeSe is one of the most important unresolved puzzles in the study of iron-based superconductors. In both spin- and orbital-nematic models, the intrinsic magnetic excitations at $\mathbf{Q}_1=(1, 0)$ and $\mathbf{Q}_2=(0, 1)$ of twin-free FeSe are expected to provide decisive criteria for clarifying this issue. Although a spin-fluctuation anisotropy below 10 meV between $\mathbf{Q}_1$ and $\mathbf{Q}_2$ has been observed by inelastic neutron scattering around $T_c\sim 9$ K ($<<T_s\sim 90$ K), it remains unclear whether such an anisotropy also persists at higher energies and associates with the nematic transition $T_{\rm s}$. Here we use resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) to probe the high-energy magnetic excitations of uniaxial-strain detwinned FeSe and {\BFA}. A prominent anisotropy between the magnetic excitations along the $H$ and $K$ directions is found to persist to $\sim200$ meV in FeSe, which is even more pronounced than the anisotropy of spin waves in {\BFA}. This anisotropy decreases gradually with increasing temperature and finally vanishes at a temperature around the nematic transition temperature $T_{\rm s}$. Our results reveal an unprecedented strong spin-excitation anisotropy with a large energy scale well above the $d_{xz}/d_{yz}$ orbital splitting, suggesting that the nematic phase transition is primarily spin-driven. Moreover, the measured high-energy spin excitations are dispersive and underdamped, which can be understood from a local-moment perspective. Our findings provide the much-needed understanding of the mechanism for the nematicity of FeSe and points to a unified description of the correlation physics across seemingly distinct classes of Fe-based superconductors.

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