Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

Violation of emergent rotational symmetry in the hexagonal Kagome superconductor CsV 3 Sb 5

  • Kazumi Fukushima,
  • Keito Obata,
  • Soichiro Yamane,
  • Yajian Hu,
  • Yongkai Li,
  • Yugui Yao,
  • Zhiwei Wang,
  • Yoshiteru Maeno,
  • Shingo Yonezawa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47043-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Superconductivity is caused by electron pairs that are canonically isotropic, whereas some exotic superconductors are known to exhibit non-trivial anisotropy stemming from unconventional pairings. However, superconductors with hexagonal symmetry, the highest rotational symmetry allowed in crystals, exceptionally have strong constraint that is called emergent rotational symmetry (ERS): anisotropic properties should be very weak especially near the critical temperature T c even for unconventional pairings such as d-wave states. Here, we investigate superconducting anisotropy of the recently-found hexagonal Kagome superconductor CsV3Sb5, which is known to exhibit various intriguing phenomena originating from its undistorted Kagome lattice formed by vanadium atoms. Based on calorimetry performed under accurate two-axis field-direction control, we discover a combination of six- and two-fold anisotropies in the in-plane upper critical field. Both anisotropies, robust up to very close to T c, are beyond predictions of standard theories. We infer that this clear ERS violation with nematicity is best explained by multi-component nematic superconducting order parameter in CsV3Sb5 intertwined with symmetry breakings caused by the underlying charge-density-wave order.