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    Elastoresistivity of Heavily Hole-Doped 122 Iron Pnictide Superconductors
    (Lausanne : Frontiers Media, 2022) Hong, Xiaochen; Sykora, Steffen; Caglieris, Federico; Behnami, Mahdi; Morozov, Igor; Aswartham, Saicharan; Grinenko, Vadim; Kihou, Kunihiro; Lee, Chul-Ho; Büchner, Bernd; Hess, Christian
    Nematicity in heavily hole-doped iron pnictide superconductors remains controversial. Sizeable nematic fluctuations and even nematic orders far from magnetic instability were declared in RbFe2As2 and its sister compounds. Here, we report a systematic elastoresistance study of a series of isovalent- and electron-doped KFe2As2 crystals. We found divergent elastoresistance on cooling for all the crystals along their [110] direction. The amplitude of elastoresistivity diverges if K is substituted with larger ions or if the system is driven toward a Lifshitz transition. However, we conclude that none of them necessarily indicates an independent nematic critical point. Instead, the increased nematicity can be associated with another electronic criticality. In particular, we propose a mechanism for how elastoresistivity is enhanced at a Lifshitz transition.
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    Disorder-induced coupling of Weyl nodes in WTe2
    (2020) Sykora, Steffen; Schoop, Johannes; Graf, Lukas; Shipunov, Grigory; Morozov, Igor V.; Aswartham, Saicharan; Büchner, Bernd; Hess, Christian; Giraud, Romain; Dufouleur, Joseph
    The finite coupling between Weyl nodes due to residual disorder is investigated by magnetotransport studies in WTe2. The anisotropic scattering of quasiparticles is evidenced from classical and quantum transport measurements. A theoretical approach using the real band structure is developed in order to calculate the dependence of the scattering anisotropy with the correlation length of the disorder. A comparison between theory and experiments reveals a short correlation length in WTe2 (ξ∼5 nm). This result implies a significant coupling between Weyl nodes and other bands. Our study thus shows that a finite intercone scattering rate always exists in weakly disordered type-II Weyl semimetals, such as WTe2, which strongly suppresses topologically nontrivial properties.