116,162 research outputs found
A Comparison of Stripe Modulations in LaBaCuO and LaNdSrCuO
We report combined soft and hard x-ray scattering studies of the electronic
and lattice modulations associated with stripe order in
LaBaCuO and LaNdSrCuO. We
find that the amplitude of both the electronic modulation of the hole density
and the strain modulation of the lattice is significantly larger in
LaBaCuO than in LaNdSrCuO
and is also better correlated. The in-plane correlation lengths are isotropic
in each case; for LaBaCuO, \AA\
whereas for LaNdSrCuOF,
\AA. We find that the modulations are temperature independent in
LaBaCuO in the low temperature tetragonal phase. In
contrast, in LaNdSrCuO, the amplitude grows
smoothly from zero, beginning 13 K below the LTT phase transition. We speculate
that the reduced average tilt angle in LaBaCuO results
in reduced charge localization and incoherent pinning, leading to the longer
correlation length and enhanced periodic modulation amplitude.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
To Duckweeds (\u3cem\u3eLandoltia punctata\u3c/em\u3e), Nanoparticulate Copper Oxide is More Inhibitory than the Soluble Copper in the Bulk Solution
CuO nanoparticles (CuO-NP) were synthesized in a hydrogen diffusion flame. Particle size and morphology were characterized using scanning mobility particle sizing, Brunauer–Emmett–Teller analysis, dynamic light scattering, and transmission electron microscopy. The solubility of CuO-NP varied with both pH and presence of other ions. CuO-NP and comparable doses of soluble Cu were applied to duckweeds, Landoltia punctata. Growth was inhibited 50% by either 0.6 mg L−1 soluble copper or by 1.0 mg L−1 CuO-NP that released only 0.16 mg L−1 soluble Cu into growth medium. A significant decrease of chlorophyll was observed in plants stressed by 1.0 mg L−1 CuO-NP, but not in the comparable 0.2 mg L−1 soluble Cu treatment. The Cu content of fronds exposed to CuO-NP is four times higher than in fronds exposed to an equivalent dose of soluble copper, and this is enough to explain the inhibitory effects on growth and chlorophyll content
Non-Zhang-Rice singlet character of the first ionization state of T-CuO
We argue that tetragonal CuO (T-CuO) has the potential to finally settle
long-standing modelling issues for cuprate physics. We compare the one-hole
quasiparticle (qp) dispersion of T-CuO to that of cuprates, in the framework of
the strongly-correlated () limit of the three-band
Emery model. Unlike in CuO, magnetic frustration in T-CuO breaks the
rotational symmetry and leads to strong deviations from the Zhang-Rice singlet
picture in parts of the reciprocal space. Our results are consistent with
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy data but in sharp contradiction to
those of a one-band model previously suggested for them. These differences
identify T-CuO as an ideal material to test a variety of scenarios proposed for
explaining cuprate phenomenology.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Origin of ferroelectricity in high magnetic ferroelectric CuO
"Magnetic ferroelectric" has been found in a wide range of spiral magnets.
However, these materials all suffer from low critical temperatures, which are
usually below 40 K, due to strong spin frustration. Recently, CuO has been
found to be multiferroic at much higher ordering temperature ( 230K). To
clarify the origin of the high ordering temperature in CuO, we investigate the
structural, electronic and magnetic properties of CuO via first-principles
methods. We find that CuO has very special nearly commensurate spiral magnetic
structure, which is stabilized via the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. The
spin frustration in CuO is relatively weak, which is one of the main reasons
that the compound have high ordering temperature. We propose that high
magnetic ferroelectric materials can be found in double sublattices of magnetic
structures similar to that of CuO.Comment: Significantly revised, errors in previous version corrected, add a
new figure. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1111.341
Oxygen phonon branches in overdoped LaSrCuO
The dispersion of the Cu-O bond-stretching vibrations in overdoped
LaSrCuO (not superconducting) has been studied by high
resolution inelastic neutron scattering. It was found that the doping-induced
renormalization of the so-called breathing and the half-breathing modes is
larger than in optimally doped LaSrCuO. On the other
hand, the phonon linewidths are generally smaller in the overdoped sample.
Features observed in optimally doped LaSrCuO which
suggest a tendency towards charge stripe formation are absent in overdoped
LaSrCuO.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
Chemical Potential Shift in NdCeCuO: Contrasting Behaviors of the Electron- and Hole-Doped Cuprates
We have studied the chemical potential shift in the electron-doped
superconductor NdCeCuO by precise measurements of
core-level photoemission spectra. The result shows that the chemical potential
monotonously increases with electron doping, quite differently from
LaSrCuO, where the shift is suppressed in the underdoped
region.
If the suppression of the shift in LaSrCuO is attributed
to strong stripe fluctuations, the monotonous increase of the chemical
potential is consistent with the absence of stripe fluctuations in
NdCeCuO. The chemical potential jump between
NdCuO and LaCuO is found to be much smaller than the
optical band gaps.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Buried double CuO chains in YBaCuO uncovered by nano-ARPES
The electron dynamics in the CuO chains has been elusive in Y-Ba-Cu-O cuprate
systems by means of standard angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES);
cleaved sample exhibits areas terminated by both CuO-chain or BaO layers, and
the size of a typical beam results in ARPES signals that are superposed from
both terminations. Here, we employ spatially-resolved ARPES with submicrometric
beam (nano-ARPES) to reveal the surface-termination-dependent electronic
structures of the double CuO chains in YBaCuO. We present the first
observation of sharp metallic dispersions and Fermi surfaces of the double CuO
chains buried underneath the CuO-plane block on the BaO terminated surface.
While the observed Fermi surfaces of the CuO chains are highly one-dimensional,
the electrons in the CuO-chains do not undergo significant electron
correlations and no signature of a Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid nor a marginal
Fermi liquid is found. Our works represent an important experimental step
toward understanding of the charge dynamics and provides a starting basis for
modelling the high- superconductivity in YBCO cuprate systems.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures including supplementary material (4 pages, 2
figures
Muon Spin Relaxation Studies of Magnetic-Field-Induced Effects in High- Superconductors
Muon spin relaxation (SR) measurements in high transverse magnetic
fields () revealed strong field-induced quasi-static
magnetism in the underdoped and Eu doped (La,Sr)CuO and
LaBaCuO, existing well above and . The
susceptibility-counterpart of Cu spin polarization, derived from the muon spin
relaxation rate, exhibits a divergent behavior towards K. No
field-induced magnetism was detected in overdoped
LaSrCuO, optimally doped Bi2212, and Zn-doped
YBaCuO.Comment: 4 pages, 4 color figure
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