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Anharmonic strong-coupling effects at the origin of the charge density wave in CsV3Sb5

2024, He, Ge, Peis, Leander, Cuddy, Emma Frances, Zhao, Zhen, Li, Dong, Zhang, Yuhang, Stumberger, Romona, Moritz, Brian, Yang, Haitao, Gao, Hongjun, Devereaux, Thomas Peter, Hackl, Rudi

The formation of charge density waves is a long-standing open problem, particularly in dimensions higher than one. Various observations in the vanadium antimonides discovered recently further underpin this notion. Here, we study the Kagome metal CsV3Sb5 using polarized inelastic light scattering and density functional theory calculations. We observe a significant gap anisotropy with 2Δmax/kBTCDW≈20, far beyond the prediction of mean-field theory. The analysis of the A1g and E2g phonons, including those emerging below TCDW, indicates strong phonon-phonon coupling, presumably mediated by a strong electron-phonon interaction. Similarly, the asymmetric Fano-type lineshape of the A1g amplitude mode suggests strong electron-phonon coupling below TCDW. The large electronic gap, the enhanced anharmonic phonon-phonon coupling, and the Fano shape of the amplitude mode combined are more supportive of a strong-coupling phonon-driven charge density wave transition than of a Fermi surface instability or an exotic mechanism in CsV3Sb5.

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Quantum critical fluctuations in an Fe-based superconductor

2022, Jost, Daniel, Peis, Leander, He, Ge, Baum, Andreas, Geprägs, Stephan, Palmstrom, Johanna C., Ikeda, Matthias S., Fisher, Ian R., Wolf, Thomas, Lederer, Samuel, Kivelson, Steven A., Hackl, Rudi

Quantum critical fluctuations may prove to play an instrumental role in the formation of unconventional superconductivity. Here, we show that the characteristic scaling of a marginal Fermi liquid is present in inelastic light scattering data of an Fe-based superconductor tuned through a quantum critical point (QCP) by chemical substitution or doping. From the doping dependence of the imaginary time dynamics we are able to distinguish regions dominated by quantum critical behavior from those having classical critical responses. This dichotomy reveals a connection between the marginal Fermi liquid behavior and quantum criticality. In particular, the overlap between regions of high superconducting transition temperatures and quantum critical scaling suggests a contribution from quantum fluctuations to the formation of superconductivity.