- 1Department of Physics and Beijing Key Laboratory of Optoelectronic Functional Materials and Micro-Nano Devices, Renmin University of China, Beijing, China
- 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, Center for Quantum Materials, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States
- 3Department of Physics, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, United States
- 4Theoretical Division and Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, United States
Electron correlations play a central role in iron-based superconductors. In these systems, multiple Fe
1 Introduction
Since the discovery of superconductivity in F-doped LaFeAsO [1], the study of iron-based superconductors (FeSCs) has been one of the most active fields in condensed matter physics. The FeSCs feature a large family of materials, which are divided into two major classes, the iron pnictides and iron chalcogenides. The highest superconducting transition temperature (
These properties raise important questions about the role of electron correlations in the FeSCs and how the correlations interplay with the superconductivity in these materials. In this review, we survey recent developments on the orbital-selective electron correlations in the FeSCs.
1.1 Electron Correlations in the FeSCs
We start by outlining the two important issues regarding the electron correlations of the FeSCs. The first issue concerns the overall strength of the electron correlations. The parent FeSCs are bad metals [18, 19], with the room-temperature electrical resistivities reaching the Mott-Ioffe-Regel limit and corresponding to the product of Fermi wave vector and mean-free path being of order unity. The Mott-Ioffe-Regel criterion [20] signifies a system with a metallic ground state and with strong electron correlations. Further evidence for the bad metal behavior comes from the optical conductivity measurement, which showed that the Drude weight is considerably reduced by the electron correlations [21–25]. In relation to this, the effective mass of the single-electron excitations is much enhanced from their non-interacting counterpart, with the enhancement factor ranging from 3 to 20 across the FeSC families [17, 26–30]. These bad-metal characteristics, together with the existence of a large spin spectral weight observed by neutron scattering experiments (already for the parent iron pnictides [31, 32]) and a number of other characteristics from measurements such as the X-ray emission [33] and Raman scattering [34] spectroscopies, imply that the parent FeSCs possess a considerable degree of electron correlations. Indeed, the integrated spin spectral weight measured from the dynamical spin susceptibility is at the order of 3
All of these experimental results suggest that the parent FeSCs are in the bad metal regime which is close to a metal-to-Mott-insulator transition (MIT). This regime can be described by a w-expansion around the MIT within the incipient Mott picture [18, 35, 36], where w is the overall fraction of the electron spectral weight that occupies the coherent itinerant part. To the zeroth order in w, the spin degrees of freedom appear in the form of quasilocalized magnetic moments with frustrated exchange interactions; this picture anchors the description of the AFM order and the associated magnetic fluctuations. The importance of such incoherent electronic excitations to the low-energy physics of the FeSCs has also been emphasized from related considerations [37–48, 50–56].
1.2 Orbital-Selective Correlations and Orbital-Selective Superconducting Pairing
The other, related, issue is the multiorbital nature of the low-energy electronic structure of FeSCs. As illustrated in Figures 1A,B, the Fermi surface of the parent FeSCs consists of several pockets, and each pocket contains contributions from multiple Fe
FIGURE 1. (A): Fermi surface of a five-orbital multiorbital Hubbard model for the iron pnictides, consisting of both hole (black symbols) and electron (red symbols) pockets. The 1-Fe Brillouin zone (BZ) is used hereafter. (B) Orbital weights (O.W.) along the electron pocket centered at
An important characteristic of the FeSCs is that different orbitals are coupled to each other, as dictated by the crystalline symmetry, and this makes the consideration of the OSMP especially nontrivial. Here, the treatment of the orbital-selective correlation effect in multiorbital models with such interorbital coupling was introduced in [61]. The analysis of [61] sets the stage for realizing
(1) An OSMP in the multiorbital Hubbard models for the iron chalcogenides [62]. Here, the
(2) A distinct crossover [dashed line, Figure 2A], with the increasing strength of the interactions, from the regime of a weakly correlated metal into an OSMP-proximate regime [62–64]. In this regime, dubbing a “strongly correlated metal” (SCM), all the orbitals remain itinerant but some of the orbitals have substantially reduced and orbitally differentiated quasiparticle weights.
FIGURE 2. (A) Ground-state phase diagram of the five-orbital multiorbital model for alkaline iron selenides at commensurate filling
The theoretical work went together with the experimental observation of an OSMP in several iron chalcogenides [29, 30, 65]. The mechanism for the suppression of interorbital coupling by the correlation effects, which allows for the OSMP, is further clarified in terms of a Landau free-energy functional in [66]. (Related microscopic studies have been carried out in [67].) In all these analyses, the interplay between the Hund’s coupling (
FIGURE 3. Illustrating the effect of the interorbital kinetic hybridization in the
The recognition of the orbital-selective correlations has led to the initial work on the orbital-selective pairing [72]. This notion was motivated by—and applied to the analysis of—the properties of the superconducting state in the under-electron-doped NaFeAs [73]. In other theoretical approaches, various forms of orbital-selective pairing were considered in the contexts of the FeSCs [74, 75].
1.3 Perspective and Objective
Because most of the parent compounds are not Mott insulators (MIs), assessing the strength of electron correlations has been an important topic since the beginning of the FeSC field. In principle, the AFM ground state and the superconducting state nearby may originate from the Fermi surface nesting mechanism of a weak-coupling theory [76–80].
As outlined above, the correlation strength of the FeSCs is intermediate: here, the Coulomb repulsion and the bandwidth are similar in magnitude, and the competition between the electrons’ itineracy and localization is the most fierce. Spectroscopy measurements have provided ample evidence that, for the parent compounds of the FeSCs, the incoherent part of the electron spectral weight
Recognizing that the study of the orbital-selective correlations and pairing has had explosive developments in recent years, here we survey the recent theoretical progress on the orbital selectivity for both the normal and superconducting states in multiorbital models for FeSCs. We focus on the MIT at
We also note that standard weak-coupling approaches (see, e.g., [99]) do not capture the orbital-selective Mott regime. However, the orbital-selective correlation effects, with some orbitals having substantially reduced and orbitally differentiated quasiparticle weights similar to what we summarize here, have more recently been incorporated in a phenomenological way [100, 101] into the weak-coupling approaches. Some of the limitations of the weak-coupling analyses have been suggested [100, 101] to be remedied by this phenomenological approach, but other issues inherent to the weak-coupling treatments—such as the under-accounting of the spin spectral-weight—remain [31] within the phenomenological approach.
The rest of the manuscript is organized as follows: in Section 2 we first briefly introduce the multiorbital Hubbard model for FeSCs and outline the
2 Orbital-Selective Correlations in the Normal State of Iron-Based Superconductors
To study the effects of orbital-selective correlation, we consider a multiorbital Hubbard model for the FeSCs. The Hamiltonian reads
Here
Here,
The onsite interaction
where
2.1 The Slave Spin Theory
The multiorbital system described by the model in Eq. 1 undergoes a MIT driven by the electron correlations at any commensurate electron filling. This transition can be studied by using a
Slave-particle (or parton) construction has a long history in the study of correlated systems [108–111]. For the single orbital Hubbard model, the slave boson method of [111] has been successfully applied. But the construction of this theory for an M-orbital Hubbard model would require
In the
Here the XY component of a quantum
is implemented. This representation contains a
To construct a saddle-point theory, one has to work within the Schwinger boson representation of the slave spins. A detailed derivation of the saddle-point equations can be found in [63, 66]. Here, for conciseness, we will mostly stay in the slave-spin representation and simply describe the main results. To ensure that the quasiparticle spectral weight in the noninteracting limit is normalized to 1 at the saddle point level, and in analogy to the standard treatment in the slave-boson theory [111], we define a dressed operator:
where the projectors
Here, we have introduced the Lagrange multiplier
One practical way is to neglect the spin flip terms in Eq. 8 without affecting the qualitative results [63]. The quasiparticle spectral weight is defined as
A metallic phase corresponds to
At the saddle-point level, the slave-spin and spinon operators are decomposed and the constraint is treated on average. We obtain two effective Hamiltonians for the spinons and the slave spins, respectively:
where
We study the MIT in the paramagnetic phase preserving the translational symmetry and can hence drop the spin and/or site indices of the slave spins and the Lagrange multiplier in the saddle-point equations, (10)(11). The parameters
2.2 Landau Free-Energy Functional for Orbital-Selective Mott Physics
As described earlier and illustrated in Figure 1C, the OSMP can develop only when (at least) one of the orbitals becomes localized, while the others remain delocalized. How can this be possible in a multiorbital model with nonzero bare interorbital coupling between orbitals? While the
Next for Eq. 11, we can define an effective field of
Note that Eq. 13 are natural consequence of Eq. 11, and this self-consistent procedure of the saddle-point theory is illustrated in Figure 3. Based on Eq 12 we can construct a Landau free-energy functional in terms of the quasiparticle weights,
in which the quadratic terms
2.3 Orbital-Selective Mott Physics in FeSCs
We now turn to microscopic studies of the MIT. A realistic microscopic model for FeSCs is described in Eq. 1. Owing to its multiorbital nature, the MIT in this model shows unique features. First, the parent compound corresponds to
The MIT in the multiorbital model for FeSCs at
Importantly, the Hund’s coupling already strongly affects the properties of the metallic state. For
Further increasing U in the bad metal phase, the system undergoes a transition to the OSMP. In this phase the
The OSMP is supported by additional theoretical studies. Orbital differentiation in KxFe2−ySe2 has also been analyzed in DFT + DMFT calculations [117]. Besides the case of the multiorbital models for KxFe2−ySe2 and related iron chalcogenides and LiFeAs, strong orbital-selective correlations and OSMP have been evidenced in several other multiorbital models for FeSCs [40, 118, 119]. Additionally, the conclusions of the U (1) slave-spin analysis, regarding both the rapid crossover into the OSMP-proximate SCM regime and the development of the OSMP phase, are confirmed by studies of the multiorbital Hubbard models for the FeSCs based on a Gutzwiller approximation [120]. Note that there has also been theoretical efforts to feed the results of the mechanistic studies on the orbital-selective correlations into the weak-coupling approaches, by incorporating the orbital selectivity in the weak-coupling calculations via phenomenological parameters [100, 101]. Experimentally, ARPES measurements provide clear evidence [29, 30] for OSMP in iron chalcogenides. As temperature goes above about 100 K, the spectral weight for the
2.4 Orbital Selectivity in the Nematic Phase of FeSe
In most iron pnictides, lowering the temperature in the parent compounds gives rise to a tetragonal-to-orthorhombic structural transition at
Experiments in bulk FeSe do not seem to fit into this framework. Under ambient pressure, a nematic phase without an AFM long-range order is stabilized in the bulk FeSe below the structural transition at
To resolve this puzzle, we examine the electron correlation effects in a multiorbital Hubbard model for the nematic phase of FeSe using the
By solving the saddle-point equations, we show that the OSMP is promoted by any of these nematic orders, as illustrated in Figure 4A. This effect is delicate, because we also find that the full Mott localization of the system depends on the type and strength of the nematic order [142]. Remarkably, we find that, by taking a proper combination of the three types of nematic order, the system can exhibit a strong orbital selectivity with
FIGURE 4. (A) Ground-state phase diagram of the five-orbital Hubbard model for FeSe with a ferro-orbital order
3 Orbital-Selective Superconducting Pairing
In Section 2 we have discussed the orbital-selective electron correlations in the normal state of FeSCs. It is natural to ask whether the strong orbital selectivity can affect the pairing symmetry and amplitudes in the superconducting states. The effects of orbital selectivity on superconductivity are two-fold. The orbital selectivity modifies the band structure from its noninteracting counterpart. This has been verified by ARPES measurements [30, 65, 121]. In addition, the orbital selectivity influences the effective interactions projected to the pairing channel. In the following, we study these effects in a frustrated multiorbital t-J model. We show that any interorbital pairing has a negligible amplitude; the structure of the pairing state is then reflected in the pairing amplitude being orbital dependent, which is denoted as orbital-selective pairing. In FeSCs, this may give rise to superconducting gaps with unexpectedly strong anisotropy as well as new type of pairing states that has no single-orbital counterpart; we will discuss how both types of effects play an important role in several iron pnictide and iron chalcogenide compounds [72, 143, 144].
3.1 Superconducting Pairing in the Multiorbital t-J Model
The bad metal behavior in the normal state implies strong electron correlations in FeSCs. In strongly correlated systems, the effective superconducting pairing has to avoid the penalty from the Coulomb repulsion. Even though the parent compound is not a MI, the superconducting phase in most cases is in proximity to an AFM phase. This suggests that the AFM exchange interaction plays a very important role for superconductivity. It has been shown theoretically that the AFM exchange interaction is enhanced in the bad metal (
The effective Hamiltonian of the model has the following form [144].
Here, the bands are renormalized by the quasiparticle spectral weights
To study the superconducting pairing, we decompose the interaction term in Eq. 16 in the pairing channel by introducing the pairing fields in the real space:
3.2 Orbital-Selective Pairing in FeSCs
Since the discovery of FeSCs, the pairing symmetry of the superconducting state has been one of the most important questions. The s-wave
The notion of orbital-selective pairing was introduced [72] in the multiorbital t-J model for electron-doped NaFeAs. With the intraorbital pairing amplitudes being dominant, this leads to a multigap structure, with different pairing components coming from different orbitals. Because the orbital composition varies along each pocket as shown in Figure 1B, this orbital-selective pairing can give rise to an anisotropic superconducting gap.
For simplicity, the exchange couplings have been assumed to be orbital independent in the calculation, and the pairing state has an
FIGURE 5. (A) Evolution of the leading pairing channels with
Besides the gap anisotropy, strong orbital selectivity may give rise to novel pairing states. In a multiorbital t-J model for the electron-doped alkaline iron chalcogenide compounds with only electron Fermi pockets, with orbital independent exchange couplings, the dominant pairing symmetry has been found to be either an s-wave
FIGURE 6. (A) Pairing phase diagram of the multiorbital t-J model for alkaline iron selenides. The blue shaded area corresponds to dominant pairing channels with an
Importantly, the
3.3 Orbital-Selective Pairing in the Nematic Phase of Iron Selenide
As we discussed in Section 2.4, recent STM measurements in the nematic phase of FeSe have uncovered not only a surprisingly large difference between the quasiparticle weights of the
Theoretically, the pairing structure in the nematic phase of FeSe has been investigated within the framework of the multiorbital t-J model in Eq. 16. The slave-spin calculation [142] produces
FIGURE 7. (A) Overall (blue symbols) and orbital resolved superconducting gaps along the Mx electron pocket. (B) Weight distributions of the
4 Summary and Outlook
Since the discovery of superconductivity in FeSCs, clarifying the underlying microscopic physics of these materials has been the goal of extensive research, and considerable progress has been achieved. By now it has become abundantly clear that electron correlations play a key role. This includes both the Hubbard and Hund’s couplings, which combine to cause the normal state of the FeSCs to be a bad metal in proximity to a Mott transition. Theoretical studies on the pertinent microscopic models for the FeSCs not only confirm the existence of the bad metal in the phase diagram, but also reveal a strong orbital selectivity in this phase, which is anchored by an orbital-selective Mott phase. In this manuscript we have reviewed recent theoretical progress on the orbital selectivity. It has been found that the orbital selectivity not only is a universal property of the normal state of FeSCs, but also shows intriguing interplay with the nematicity. Equally important, it can strongly affect the superconducting states of the system.
It is worth reiterating that the FeSCs consist of a large family of materials, and superconductivity has been found over a broad range of tuning parameters, such as pressure and electron filling. For example, many electron-doped iron chalcogenides have a simpler Fermi surface, with only electron pockets, and the electron filling is
Also of note is the case of extremely hole-doped iron pnictides, which likewise displays superconductivity. A prototype class of materials in this category is AFe2As2 (A = K, Rb, Cs), which contains hole pockets only, and the electron filling is at
FIGURE 8. Schematic phase diagram as a function of
A topic of considerable recent interest in the area of FeSCs is the indication for a topologically nontrivial band structure and the possible Majorana zero mode in the superconducting iron chalcogenides [168]. This highlights the important role of spin-orbit coupling in these systems. Given the compelling evidence for the strongly orbital-selective correlations we have discussed here, it would be highly desirable to clarify how the interplay between the correlation effects and the spin-orbit coupling affects the topological properties of the electronic band structure. Such efforts promise to elucidate the extent to which the topological band structure develops in the various families of FeSCs.
Author Contributions
All authors listed have made a substantial, direct, and intellectual contribution to the work and approved it for publication.
Funding
Work at Renmin University has been supported by the National Science Foundation of China, Grant number 11674392; the Ministry of Science and Technology of China, National Program on Key Research Project, Grant no. 2016YFA0300504; and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities and the Research Funds of Renmin University of China, Grant no. 18XNLG24. Work at Rice has been supported by the DOE BES Award, #DE-SC0018197, and the Robert A. Welch Foundation, Grant no. C-1411. Work at Los Alamos was carried out under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration under Contract no. 89233218CNA000001 and was supported by the LANL LDRD Program. Q.S. acknowledges the support of NSF Grant no. PHY-1607611 at the Aspen Center for Physics.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Acknowledgments
We thank the late E. Abrahams, R. J. Birgeneau, P. C. Dai, W. Ding, P. Goswami, K. Jin, C. L. Liu, D. H. Lu, X. Y. Lu, P. Nikolic, Z.-X. Shen, Y. Song, M. Yi, and W. Yu for useful discussions. R.Y. acknowledges the hospitality of the T.D. Lee Institute.
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Keywords: iron-based superconductors, iron selenides, electron correlations, orbital selectivity, orbital-selective pairing
Citation: Yu R, Hu H, Nica EM, Zhu J-X and Si Q (2021) Orbital Selectivity in Electron Correlations and Superconducting Pairing of Iron-Based Superconductors. Front. Phys. 9:578347. doi: 10.3389/fphy.2021.578347
Received: 30 June 2020; Accepted: 05 February 2021;
Published: 05 May 2021.
Edited by:
Jose P. Rodriguez, California State University, Los Angeles, United StatesReviewed by:
Roser Valenti, Goethe University Frankfurt, GermanyThomas Maier, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (DOE), United States
Copyright © 2021 Yu, Hu, Nica, Zhu and Si. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Rong Yu, rong.yu@ruc.edu.cn