24th CEMS Colloquium

Speaker

Prof. Minoru Nohara (Okayama University)

Date

17:30 - 18:30, January 28, 2015 (Wednesday)

Venue

Okochi-Hall, RIKEN

Title

Development of high-temperature superconductors using arsenic chemistry

Abstract

Comparable energy scale of the Cu 3d and O 2p orbitals in copper oxides provides a platform for high-temperature superconductivity, known as a charge-transfer insulator. Even in iron-based superconductors, the Fe 3d and As 4p orbitals are energetically close, which induce the breaking (making) of As-As chemical bonds depending on the filling of the Fe 3d band. CaFe2As2 is a typical example of this case, where superconductivity at 45 K results on the verge of As-As bond formation along the c-axis [1]. Another example is Ca10(Pt4As8)(Fe2-xPtxAs2)5, where arsenic dimers are formed in ab-plane and superconductivity emerges at 38 K [2]. And furthermore, infinite arsenic chains can be formed in ab-plane of 112-type CaFeAs2, where we observed superconductivity at 47 K [3].

This talk serves as an introduction to the material design for high-temperature superconductivity using the chemistry of arsenic, with the abovementioned compounds for examples.

[1] K. Kudo et al. Sci. Rep. 3, 147 (2013).
[2] S. Kakiya et al. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 80, 093704 (2011).
[3] K. Kudo et al. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 83, 093705 (2014).