Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5492397 | Physica C: Superconductivity and its Applications | 2017 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
For iron-sulfide (FeS), we investigate the correlation between the structural details, including its dimensionality and composition, with its magnetic and superconducting properties. We compare, theoretically and experimentally, the two-dimensional (2D) layered tetragonal (“t-FeS”) phase with the 3D hexagonal ("h-FeS") phase. X-ray diffraction reveals iron-deficient chemical compositions of t-Fe0.93(1)S and h-Fe0.84(1)S that show no low-temperature structural transitions. First-principles calculations reveal a high sensitivity of the 2D structure to the electronic and magnetic properties, predicting marginal antiferromagnetic instability for our compound (sulfur height of zS =â0.252) with an ordering energy of about 11 meV/Fe, while the 3D phase is magnetically stable. Experimentally, h-Fe0.84S orders magnetically well above room temperature, while t-Fe0.93S shows coexistence of antiferromagnetism at TN =â116 and filamentary superconductivity below Tc =â4 K. Low temperature neutron diffraction data reveals antiferromagnetic commensurate ordering with wave vector km = (0.25,0.25,0) and 0.46(2) µB/Fe. Additionally, neutron scattering measurements were used to find the particle size and iron vacancy arrangement of t-FeS and h-FeS. The structure of iron sulfide has a delicate relationship with the superconducting transition; while our sample with aâ=â3.6772(7) Ã
is a filamentary superconductor coexisting with an antiferromagnetic phase, previously reported samples with aâ>â3.68Â Ã
are bulk superconductors with no magnetism, and those with a â 3.674 Ã
show magnetic properties.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Condensed Matter Physics
Authors
S.J. Kuhn, M.K. Kidder, D.S. Parker, C. dela Cruz, M.A. McGuire, W.M. Chance, Li Li, L. Debeer-Schmitt, J. Ermentrout, K.C. Littrell, M.R. Eskildsen, A.S. Sefat,