Raman Spectroscopy in Correlated Systems

The properties of quantum materials are governed by electronic correlations which cannot be understood in terms of individual properties of electrons. Famous examples are superconductors, density wave systems or Mott (rather than band) insulators. Raman spectroscopy, the inelastic scattering of visible photons, is among the powerful techniques for studying the origin of these emergent phases and may visualize the interactions responsible for Cooper pairing in a superconductor.
Team
Recent publications
Harrison Ruiz, Yao Wang, Brian Moritz, Andreas Baum, Rudi Hackl, and Thomas P. Devereaux
Research Article | Physical Review B 99, 125130  (2019)
A. Baum, H. N. Ruiz, N. Lazarevic, Yao Wang, T. Böhm, R. Hosseinian Ahangharnejhad, P. Adelmann, T. Wolf, Z. V. Popovic, B. Moritz, T. P. Devereaux, and R. Hackl
Research Article | Communications Physics 2, 14  (2019)
T. Böhm, F. Kretzschmar, A. Baum, M. Rehm, D. Jost, R. Hosseinian Ahangharnejhad, R. Thomale, C. Platt, T. A. Maier, W. Hanke, B. Moritz, T. P. Devereaux, D. J. Scalapino, S. Maiti, P. J. Hirschfeld, P. Adelmann, T. Wolf, Hai-Hu Wen, and R. Hackl
Research Article | npj Quantum Materials 3, 48  (2018)
F. Kretzschmar, T. Böhm, U. Karahasanovic, B. Muschler, A. Baum, D. Jost, J. Schmalian, S. Caprara, M. Grilli, C. Di Castro, J. G. Analytis, J.-H. Chu, I. R. Fisher, R. Hackl
Research Article | Nature Physics 12, 560-563  (2016)
S. Maiti, T. A. Maier, T. Boehm, R. Hackl, P. J. Hirschfeld
Research Article | Physical Review Letters 117, 257001  (2016)

In a superconductor, the excitation of electron-hole pairs requires a minimal energy of 2Δ between incoming and outgoing photons (a). In a second process, Cooper pairs, which are responsible for the infinite conductivity, are broken up for energies exceeding 2Δ (b). Thus, Raman scattering allows one to determine the condensation energy Δ of a superconductor. If the gap depends on the momentum k of the electrons such as in the cuprates or the iron-based materials, the selection rules allow one to map out Δk in momentum space. Panel (d) shows the interactions possible in a prototypical ferro-pnictide. The circles represent the approximate shapes of the Fermi surface sheets. The horizontal and vertical blue arrows symbolize the ground state interaction responsible for Cooper pairing. The diagonal magenta line represents an additional interaction between two other Fermi surface sheets. Since it is weaker than the ground state interaction, it leads “only” to a bound state inside the gap (c). These modes, although predicted a long time ago, were unambiguously observed and explained only in the pnictides. These “dancing electrons” strongly support unconventional Cooper pairing in this material class driven by spin fluctuations rather than phonons as in conventional superconductors.