Physical Review X (Jan 2022)

Mott-Driven BEC-BCS Crossover in a Doped Spin Liquid Candidate κ-(BEDT-TTF)_{4}Hg_{2.89}Br_{8}

  • Y. Suzuki,
  • K. Wakamatsu,
  • J. Ibuka,
  • H. Oike,
  • T. Fujii,
  • K. Miyagawa,
  • H. Taniguchi,
  • K. Kanoda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.12.011016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 011016

Abstract

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The pairing of interacting fermions leading to superfluidity has two limiting regimes: the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) scheme for weakly interacting degenerate fermions and the Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of bosonic pairs of strongly interacting fermions. While the superconductivity that emerges in most metallic systems is the BCS-like electron pairing, strongly correlated electrons with poor Fermi liquidity can condense into the unconventional BEC-like pairs. Quantum spin liquids harbor extraordinary spin correlation free from order, and the superconductivity that possibly emerges by carrier doping of the spin liquids is expected to have a peculiar pairing nature. The present study experimentally explores the nature of the pairing condensate in a doped spin liquid candidate material and under varying pressure, which changes the electron-electron Coulombic interactions across the Mott critical value in the system. The transport measurements reveal that the superconductivity at low pressures is a BEC-like condensate from a non-Fermi liquid and crosses over to a BCS-like condensate from a Fermi liquid at high pressures. The Nernst-effect measurements distinctively illustrate the two regimes of the pairing in terms of its robustness to the magnetic field. The present Mott tuning of the BEC-BCS crossover can be compared to the Feshbach tuning of the BEC-BCS crossover of fermionic cold atoms.