Collapse of Metallicity and High-Tc Superconductivity in the High-Pressure phase of FeSe0.89S0.11

Abstract

We investigate the high-pressure phase of the iron-based superconductor FeSe0.89S0.11 using transport and tunnel diode oscillator studies. We construct detailed pressure-temperature phase diagrams that indicate that outside of the nematic phase, the superconducting critical temperature reaches a minimum before it is quickly enhanced towards 40 K above 4 GPa. The resistivity data reveal signatures of a fan-like structure of non-Fermi liquid behaviour which could indicate the existence of a putative quantum critical point buried underneath the superconducting dome around 4.3 GPa. Further increasing the pressure, the zero-field electrical resistivity develops a non-metallic temperature dependence and the superconducting transition broadens significantly. Eventually, the system fails to reach a fully zero-resistance state despite a continuous finite superconducting transition temperature, and any remaining resistance at low temperatures becomes strongly current-dependent. Our results suggest that the high-pressure, high-Tc phase of iron chalcogenides is very fragile and sensitive to uniaxial effects of the pressure medium, cell design and sample thickness which can trigger a first-order transition. These high-pressure regions could be understood assuming a real-space phase separation caused by concomitant electronic and structural instabilities.

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