Abstract
In a material prone to a nematic instability, anisotropic strain in principle provides a preferred symmetry-breaking direction for the electronic nematic state to follow. This is consistent with experimental observations, where electronic nematicity and structural anisotropy typically appear hand-in-hand. In this work, we discover that electronic nematicity can be locally decoupled from the underlying structural anisotropy in strain-engineered iron-selenide (FeSe) thin films. We use heteroepitaxial molecular beam epitaxy to grow FeSe with a nanoscale network of modulations that give rise to spatially varying strain. We map local anisotropic strain by analyzing scanning tunneling microscopy topographs, and visualize electronic nematic domains from concomitant spectroscopic maps. While the domains form so that the energy of nemato-elastic coupling is minimized, we observe distinct regions where electronic nematic ordering fails to flip direction, even though the underlying structural anisotropy is locally reversed. The findings point towards a nanometer-scale stiffness of the nematic order parameter.
Subject terms: Electronic properties and materials; Surfaces, interfaces and thin films
Here, in contrast to previous observations in Fe-based superconductors, scanning tunnelling microscopy of strain-patterned FeSe thin films reveals a local decoupling of electron nematicity and structural anisotropy, pointing towards a stiffness of the nematic order parameter at the nanoscale.
Introduction
Electronic nematic ordering, characterized by breaking the rotational symmetry of the electronic structure, has emerged as a key signature of many unconventional superconductors1–10. In Fe-based superconductors, it is marked by a pronounced in-plane resistivity anisotropy11–14, lifting of the band degeneracy15–18 and directional scattering of electrons along a preferred Fe–Fe lattice vector3,19–21, typically accompanied by a small orthorhombic distortion along the same direction. To gain insight into the origin of electronic nematicity, experiments have explored its evolution with chemical composition1,11–13,22, temperature10–19,22–24, pressure22, and anisotropic strain11–14,24,25. Out of the array of these experimental handles, anisotropic strain presents a unique tuning knob that can controllably break the symmetry of the lattice. In turn, this can directly impact the overlap between inequivalent neighboring Fe–Fe orbitals, lifting the dxz and dyz orbital degeneracy, and in principle providing a preferred direction for the electronic nematicity to follow.
Microscopic imaging of Fe-based superconductors revealed the tendency of real materials to form electronic nematic domains, even in crystals under zero nominal strain11,14,19,21,23,26–28. The domains can have two orthogonal configurations oriented along inequivalent Fe–Fe lattice vectors. In bulk single crystals, the spatial extent of electronic nematic domains is typically at the order of a few micrometers11,14,23,26,27. In certain thin films however, the domain size is found to be significantly reduced compared to their bulk counterparts21,28. For example, while the domain size in FeSe single crystals is several micrometers14,23, it is reduced to ~10 nm length scales in thin films21,28. This possibly suggests that the substrate, which inevitably has a somewhat different lattice constant compared to the film, may play a role in the formation of smaller electronic nematic domains. However, quantitative measure of local symmetry-breaking strain in these systems, and its role in the development of nanoscale electronic nematic domains remains unexplored. In this work, we visualize the formation of electronic nematic domains around an underlying network of structural modulations in strained multilayer films of FeSe, and discover a de-coupling of the local antisymmetric strain and electronic nematic order.
Results
Observation of a network of structural modulations
FeSe presents an excellent playground to explore the interplay of electronic nematicity and symmetry breaking strain due to its structural simplicity and the absence of magnetic ordering that is present in many other Fe-based superconductors29,30. In principle, various experimental methods can be used to apply strain to a material, such as voltage-controlled piezoelectric setups11,13,25,31,32, mechanical actuators27, differential thermal contraction24,33, and heteroepitaxial film growth34–37. In this work, we use molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) to grow FeSe thin films (a = 3.8 Å) on SrTiO3(001), a substrate with a ~2% lattice mismatch (a = 3.9 Å) (Fig. 1a, b, see “Methods” section). We find a 2D network of modulations emerging at the surface of FeSe, propagating approximately along the Fe–Fe lattice directions (Fig. 1c, d). As we will subsequently show, this in turn leads to a spatially varying strain at the surface. The spatial distribution of modulation lines is qualitatively similar to those in heteroepitaxially-grown heterostructures of other chalcogenides35–37 and arsenides34. In our FeSe films, ranging from 3 to 6 monolayers in thickness, this distance between neighboring modulation lines is approximately 15–20 nm, consistent with the spacing determined from cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy38 and roughly consistent with the expected value based on the lattice constant mismatch between FeSe and SrTiO3(001) (Supplementary Note 1).
Visualizing electronic nematic domains
To characterize electronic properties of our thin films, we use low-temperature spectroscopic-imaging scanning tunneling microscopy. Although a single-unit-cell thick FeSe grown on SrTiO3(001) can exhibit superconductivity with ~10–15 meV pairing gap (Supplementary Fig. 7), the surface of thicker FeSe films (~a few to ~50 nm thick21) grown on the same substrate typically does not show superconducting behavior (Supplementary Note 8). By acquiring dI/dV(r,V) or I(r,V) spectra (where I is the tunneling current, V is the voltage applied to the sample, and r is the relative xy-position of the tip) on a densely-spaced pixel grid, we are able to visualize spatial variations in electronic density of states as a function of energy and position. We focus on an area shown in Fig. 1d, where we observe two striking features not immediately obvious from STM topographs (Fig. 2b). First, we can discern dark irregularly-shaped contours enclosing parts of the sample (denoted by white dashed lines). Second, we observe horizontal (an example denoted by green arrows) or vertical stripes (purple arrows) oriented along Fe–Fe lattice directions, with ~1.8 nm nearest-neighbor distance, which do not disperse as a function of energy in dI/dV maps (Supplementary Fig. 1). This has been interpreted as the formation of charge-stripes in the electronic nematic state21,28, with the direction of electronic nematicity rotating by 90° across the domain boundaries. This interpretation is further supported by dispersive C2-symmetric modulations pinned to individual dumbbell-shaped impurities, which also rotate by 90° across the same boundaries (Fig. 2d). Putting this information together, we conclude that the sample consists of two types of electronic nematic domains. We note that the smallest domains observed here are only ~100 nm2, significantly smaller than those in bulk single crystals14,23. As we will show, the reduced domain size can be attributed to the rapidly varying strain landscape (Fig. 3).
Strain analysis
To measure local structural distortions, we start with an atomically-resolved STM topograph (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. 3), and apply a geometric phase analysis method33,37 based on the Lawler–Fujita drift-correction algorithm4. This method allows us to determine the displacement of atoms with picoscale resolution. The four-component strain tensor (where i, j = a, b) can be used to extract different types of strain deformations. For example, represents the change of the lattice constant along the a-axis (relative to the average lattice constant in the field-of-view), with positive (negative) values denoting local tensile (compressive) strain. Taking into account strain along both lattice directions, it is convenient to define symmetric strain component: and antisymmetric strain component: . The latter is particularly useful as a quantitative measure of structural anisotropy between the two lattice directions. We apply the strain analysis algorithm to the same area as in Fig. 2 to obtain strain maps (Fig. 3b–e). Tensile strain is observed along the modulation lines in both and maps, which is sandwiched by two ribbons of compressive strain. Further away from the modulation lines, there is tensile strain again in broader areas. To support the robustness of the strain algorithm, we note that strain maps calculated from STM topographs acquired in a range of different biases look qualitatively indistinguishable (Supplementary Figs. 2 and 4). Theoretically calculated39,40 strain maps based on a network of edge dislocations (Fig. 3g–j), Supplementary Note 7) also show a close resemblance to our experimental data (Fig. 3b–e). Therefore, we can conclude that the observed strain can be modeled well by a misfit dislocation network, with small differences that could be attributed to intrinsic orthorhombic distortion accompanying each electronic nematic domain.
Correlation of nematic domains and antisymmetric strain
To investigate strain inhomogeneity further, we superimpose the outlines of electronic nematic domain boundaries on top of the antisymmetric strain map U(r) (Fig. 4c). For the electronic nematic domain A, where the charge-stripe wave vector is oriented along the a-axis, it is expected that the lattice constant along the a-axis (a0) is larger than that along the b-axis (b0)21. Indeed, the average antisymmetric strain within this region is consistent with this expectation (orange color in Fig. 4c). Similarly, within the electronic nematic domains B, where the charge-stripe wave vector propagates along the b-axis, we find that on average, b0 is greater than a0 (purple color in Fig. 4c). This is consistent with the global picture revealed in elasto-resistance experiments of bulk single crystals, where electronic nematic response followed the direction of externally applied anisotropic strain11,12. However, our ability to probe both local anisotropy and electronic nematicity at the nanoscale enables us to explore their correlation at previously inaccessible atomic length scales.
Interestingly, we find that the distribution of antisymmetric strain values within each electronic nematic domain is highly inhomogeneous (Fig. 4c, e). Moreover, not only do we find variations in magnitude, but also in the sign of the anisotropic strain. In other words, within electronic nematic domain A where the direction of electronic nematicity would dictate that a0 should be larger than b0, we observe sizeable regions (31% of the area) where this trend is opposite (an example denoted by blue arrow in Fig. 4c). The same observation is also apparent in the orthogonally oriented electronic nematic domain B (yellow arrow in Fig. 4c), where regions with a0 > b0 comprise 21% of the whole area. Thus, our experiments reveal a local decoupling of structural and electronic anisotropy in an electronic nematic system. We emphasize that this result does not rely on the theoretical strain model in Fig. 3 or the nature of strain modulation lines. The local strain on the surface is directly determined from atomically-resolved STM topographs, and then correlated with simultaneously acquired dI/dV maps where we can see electronic nematic domains.
Discussion
To gain further insight into the electronic nematic domain distribution, we consider a phenomenological model where the electronic nematicity is described by an Ising order parameter field . In the simplest of terms, our system can be represented as a 2D square network of lattice sites, each characterized by an electronic nematic configuration oriented along either a or b-axis. Antisymmetric strain acts as an external field that linearly couples to , leading to an overall interaction energy , where index i runs over all lattice sites. If this was the only interaction in our system, to minimize the energy, the direction of would strictly dictate the orientation of to be along the same direction. However, this is clearly contradictory to our observations (Fig. 4f). Therefore, we need to consider the correlation energy due to nearest neighbor interactions between the nematic fields: . This term accounts for the increase in the overall energy along the boundary line, i.e., the domain wall, separating two orthogonally oriented electronic nematic domains, analogous to the energy increase due to anti-alignment of nearest neighbor spins in the ferromagnetic Ising model. This model suggests that competing contributions of E1 and E2 will contribute to the ultimate formation of domains.
It is important to notice that the relative magnitudes of E1 and E2 will strongly depend on the size of electronic nematic domains formed. For micron size domains in bulk single crystals, the number of nearest neighbor pairs along a domain boundary is much smaller than the total number of sites . Correspondingly, E2 is negligible compared to E1 . However, as the domain size decreases, tends to , and E2 can become comparable to E1. This can explain why no electronic domains are formed along dashed white lines in Fig. 4f—the energy gain from aligning with over the small area is simply not enough to overcome the energy loss from forming a nematic boundary. Therefore, the decoupling of electronic nematicity and structural anisotropy would be energetically favored.
Our experiments highlight an application of heteroepitaxy to create a densely spaced strain grid in thin films of FeSe. We reveal a direct evidence of local decoupling between electronic nematicity and structural anisotropy, which is likely a consequence of rapidly varying anisotropic strain. Given that antisymmetric strain in our films changes sign over only ~5 nanometers, but the smallest electronic nematic domains observed are several times larger than that, electronic nematic rigidity length scale is likely larger than ~5 nm. This in turn suggests that it may be difficult to partition the nematic domains beyond the size already achieved here. Future experiments tracking the domain distribution as a function of temperature, could shed light on any spatial variations of TN in different strained regions and the robustness of domain boundaries with thermal cycling. Complementary to this, Te substitution for Se in strain-patterned FeSe can also allow explorations of domain formation by pushing the electronic nematic transition towards zero temperature41. In analogy to the magnetic field-driven motion of nematic domain boundaries detected in Ba(Fe1−xCox)2As242, which provided insight into substantial magneto-elastic coupling in that system, it would be interesting to investigate how the nanoscale nematic domains in FeSe behave in response to an in-plane magnetic field. Lastly, Potassium surface doping could lead to a re-emergence of superconductivity at the surface of our FeSe heterostructures43,44, and in turn enable studying the effects of spatially varying strain on superconductivity in FeSe-based compounds.
Methods
MBE growth
FeSe films were grown on Nb-doped (0.05 wt%) SrTiO3 (001) (Shinkosha). The substrates were sonicated in acetone and 2-propanol, followed by annealing in O2 supplied tube furnace at 1000 °C for 3 h. This step created √13 × √13 R33.7° surface reconstruction, which has been observed in both RHEED images and STM topographs (Supplementary Fig. 6). The substrates were then introduced into our MBE system (Fermion Instruments) with a base pressure of ~4 × 10−10 Torr. Continuously monitored by a pyrometer, the substrates were slowly heated up to ~400 °C for growth. Fe (99%) and Se (99.999%) were co-evaporated from two Knudsen cells held at 1100 and 145 °C, respectively, corresponding to flux rates of 9.87 × 10−5 atoms/(sec*Å2) for Fe and 3.37 × 10−3 atoms/(sec*Å2) for Se measured by the quartz crystal microbalance. At these relatively low flux rates, it takes about 28 min to form each monolayer, followed by post-growth annealing at ~450 °C for 2–3 h. After growth, the samples were either quickly transferred to the STM using a vacuum suitcase chamber held at ~1 × 10−9 Torr or capped with ~50 nm thick amorphous Se layer, and de-capped in the STM chamber at ~500 °C for 2 h. We note that FeSe films with modulations were observed in both films transferred by suitcase and de-capped thin films (Supplementary Note 4). We hypothesize that the modulations in multilayer FeSe may be related to the √13 × √13 R33.7° surface reconstruction of SrTiO3 (001)38.
STM measurements
STM data was acquired using a Unisoku USM1300 STM at the base temperature of ~4.5 K. Spectroscopic measurements were made using a standard lock-in technique with 915 Hz frequency and bias excitation as detailed in figure captions. STM tips used were home-made chemically-etched tungsten tips, annealed in UHV to bright orange color prior to STM imaging.
Supplementary information
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Jiun-Haw Chu for insightful discussions. I.Z. acknowledges the support from National Science Foundation grant no. NSF-DMR-1654041 (STM data and analysis) and DARPA grant no. N66001-17-1-4051 (MBE synthesis). Z.W. acknowledges support from the US Department of Energy, Basic Energy Sciences grant no. DE-FG02-99ER45747.
Author contributions
MBE growth of FeSe was performed by Z.R. and S.S. STM experiments were carried out by H.L. and H.Z. Z.R., H.L., H.Z., and S.S. analyzed the STM data with the guidance from I.Z. Z.R. performed theoretical strain model calculations. Z.W. provided theoretical input on the interpretation of STM data. I.Z. supervised the project. I.Z. and Z.R. wrote the manuscript with input from all the authors.
Data availability
Raw data used for the analysis shown in Figs. 2–4 can be downloaded from: 10.5281/zenodo.4273119.
Code availability
The computer code used for data analysis is available upon request from the corresponding author.
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Footnotes
Peer review information Nature Communications thanks the anonymous reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer review of this work. Peer reviewer reports are available.
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
Supplementary information is available for this paper at 10.1038/s41467-020-20150-y.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
Raw data used for the analysis shown in Figs. 2–4 can be downloaded from: 10.5281/zenodo.4273119.
The computer code used for data analysis is available upon request from the corresponding author.