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91̽»¨
Beecroft building, Department of Physics, 91̽»¨
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof. J. C. Seamus Davis

Professor of Physics

Research theme

  • Fields, strings, and quantum dynamics
  • Quantum materials

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Macroscopic Quantum Matter
seamus.davis@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: +353830392937
Clarendon Laboratory, room 512.40.28
  • About
  • Publications

Pair density waves in superconducting vortex halos

PHYSICAL REVIEW B 97:17 (2018) ARTN 174510

Authors:

Yuxuan Wang, Stephen D Edkins, Mohammad H Hamidian, JC Seamus Davis, Eduardo Fradkin, Steven A Kivelson

In-situ angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy of copper-oxide thin films synthesized by molecular beam epitaxy

Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena (2018)

Authors:

CK Kim, IK Drozdov, K Fujita, JCS Davis, I Božović, T Valla

Abstract:

© 2018 Elsevier B.V. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) is the key momentum-resolved technique for direct probing of the electronic structure of a material. However, since it is highly surface-sensitive, it has been applied to a relatively small set of complex oxides that can be easily cleaved in ultra-high vacuum. Here we describe a new multi-module system at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) in which an oxide molecular beam epitaxy (OMBE) is interconnected with an ARPES and a spectroscopic-imaging scanning tunneling microscopy (SI-STM) module. This new capability largely expands the range of complex-oxide materials and artificial heterostructures accessible to these two most powerful and complementary techniques for studies of electronic structure of materials. We also present the first experimental results obtained using this system — the ARPES studies of electronic band structure of a La2-xSrxCuO4 (LSCO) thin film grown by OMBE.

Orbital superconductivity, defects, and pinned nematic fluctuations in the doped iron chalcogenide FeSe0.45Te0.55

Physical Review B 96:6 (2017)

Authors:

S Sarkar, J Van Dyke, PO Sprau, F Massee, U Welp, WK Kwok, JCS Davis, DK Morr

Abstract:

© 2017 American Physical Society. We demonstrate that the differential conductance, dI/dV, measured via spectroscopic imaging scanning tunneling microscopy in the doped iron chalcogenide FeSe0.45Te0.55, possesses a series of characteristic features that allow one to extract the orbital structure of the superconducting gaps. This yields nearly isotropic superconducting gaps on the two holelike Fermi surfaces, and a strongly anisotropic gap on the electronlike Fermi surface. Moreover, we show that the pinning of nematic fluctuations by defects can give rise to a dumbbell-like spatial structure of the induced impurity bound states, and explains the related C2 symmetry in the Fourier transformed differential conductance.

Discovery of orbital-selective Cooper pairing in FeSe

Science American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 357:6346 (2017) 75-80

Authors:

PO Sprau, A Kostin, A Kreisel, AE Böhmer, V Taufour, PC Canfield, S Mukherjee, PJ Hirschfeld, BM Andersen, JC Séamus Davis

Orbital selective pairing and gap structures of iron-based superconductors

Physical Review B 95:17 (2017)

Authors:

A Kreisel, BM Andersen, PO Sprau, A Kostin, JCS Davis, PJ Hirschfeld

Abstract:

© 2017 American Physical Society. We discuss the influence on spin-fluctuation pairing theory of orbital selective strong correlation effects in Fe-based superconductors, particularly Fe chalcogenide systems. We propose that a key ingredient for an improved itinerant pairing theory is orbital selectivity, i.e., incorporating the reduced coherence of quasiparticles occupying specific orbital states. This modifies the usual spin-fluctuation theory via suppression of pair scattering processes involving those less coherent states and results in orbital selective Cooper pairing of electrons in the remaining states. We show that this paradigm yields remarkably good agreement with the experimentally observed anisotropic gap structures in both bulk and monolayer FeSe, as well as LiFeAs, indicating that orbital selective Cooper pairing plays a key role in the more strongly correlated iron-based superconductors.

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