Absence of Superconductivity in the "hole-doped" Fe pnictide Ba(Fe1-xMnx)2As2: Photoemission and X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy Studies

Abstract

We have studied the electronic structure of Ba(Fe1-xMnx)2As2 (x=0.08), which fails to become a superconductor in spite of the formal hole doping like Ba1-xKxFe2As2, by photoemission spectroscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS). With decreasing temperature, a transition from the paramagnetic phase to the antiferromagnetic phase was clearly observed by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. XAS results indicated that the substituted Mn atoms form a strongly hybridized ground state. Resonance-photoemission spectra at the Mn L3 edge revealed that the Mn 3d partial density of states is distributed over a wide energy range of 2-13 eV below the Fermi level (EF), with little contribution around EF. This indicates that the dopant Mn 3d states are localized in spite of the strong Mn 3d-As 4p hybridization and split into the occupied and unoccupied parts due to the on-site Coulomb and exchange interaction. The absence of superconductivity in Ba(Fe1-xMnx)2As2 can thus be ascribed both to the absence of carrier doping in the FeAs plane, and to the strong stabilizaiton of the antiferromagnetic order by the Mn impurities.

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