75 research outputs found
Remnant Fermi Surfaces in Photoemission
Recent experiments have introduced a new concept for analyzing the
photoemission spectra of correlated electrons -- the remnant Fermi surface
(rFs), which can be measured even in systems which lack a conventional Fermi
surface. Here, we analyze the rFs in a number of interacting electron models,
and find that the results fall into two classes. For systems with pairing
instabilities, the rFs is an accurate replica of the true Fermi surface. In the
presence of nesting instabilities, the rFs is a map of the resulting
superlattice Brillouin zone. The results suggest that the gap in Ca_2CuO_2Cl_2
is of nesting origin.Comment: 4 pages LaTex, 3 ps figure
Hot Spots and Transition from d-Wave to Another Pairing Symmetry in the Electron-Doped Cuprate Superconductors
We present a simple theoretical explanation for a transition from d-wave to
another superconducting pairing observed in the electron-doped cuprates. The
d_{x^2-y^2} pairing potential Delta, which has the maximal magnitude and
opposite signs at the hot spots on the Fermi surface, becomes suppressed with
the increase of electron doping, because the hot spots approach the Brillouin
zone diagonals, where Delta vanishes. Then, the d_{x^2-y^2} pairing is replaced
by either singlet s-wave or triplet p-wave pairing. We argue in favor of the
latter and discuss experiments to uncover it.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, RevTeX 4. V.2: Extra figure and many references
added. V.3: Minor update of references for the proof
From nodal liquid to nodal Mottness in a frustrated Hubbard model
We investigate the physics of frustrated 3-leg Hubbard ladders in the band
limit, when hopping across the ladder's rungs (t) is of the same
order as hopping along them (t) much greater than the onsite Coulomb repulsion
(U). We show that this model exhibits a striking electron-hole asymmetry close
to half-filling: the hole-doped system at low temperatures develops a
Resonating Valence Bond (RVB)-like d-wave gap (pseudogap close to (,0))
coinciding with gapless nodal excitations (nodal liquid); in contrast, the
electron-doped system is seen to develop a Mott gap at the nodes, whilst
retaining a metallic character of its majority Fermi surface. At lower
temperatures in the electron-doped case, d-wave superconducting correlations --
here, coexisting with gapped nodal excitations -- are already seen to arise.
Upon further doping the hole-doped case, the RVB-like state yields to d-wave
superconductivity. Such physics is reminiscent of that exhibited by the high
temperature cuprate superconductors--notably electron-hole asymmetry as noted
by Angle Resolved PhotoEmission Spectroscopy (ARPES) and the resistivity
exponents observed. This toy model also reinforces the importance of a more
thorough experimental investigation of the known 3-leg ladder cuprate systems,
and may have some bearing on low dimensional organic superconductors.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figure
Flux Phase as a Dynamic Jahn-Teller Phase: Berryonic Matter in the Cuprates?
There is considerable evidence for some form of charge ordering on the
hole-doped stripes in the cuprates, mainly associated with the low-temperature
tetragonal phase, but with some evidence for either charge density waves or a
flux phase, which is a form of dynamic charge-density wave. These three states
form a pseudospin triplet, demonstrating a close connection with the E X e
dynamic Jahn-Teller effect, suggesting that the cuprates constitute a form of
Berryonic matter. This in turn suggests a new model for the dynamic Jahn-Teller
effect as a form of flux phase. A simple model of the Cu-O bond stretching
phonons allows an estimate of electron-phonon coupling for these modes,
explaining why the half breathing mode softens so much more than the full
oxygen breathing mode. The anomalous properties of provide a coupling
(correlated hopping) which acts to stabilize density wave phases.Comment: Major Revisions: includes comparisons with specific cuprate phonon
modes, 16 eps figures, revte
Phase Separation Models for Cuprate Stripe Arrays
An electronic phase separation model provides a natural explanation for a
large variety of experimental results in the cuprates, including evidence for
both stripes and larger domains, and a termination of the phase separation in
the slightly overdoped regime, when the average hole density equals that on the
charged stripes. Several models are presented for charged stripes, showing how
density waves, superconductivity, and strong correlations compete with quantum
size effects (QSEs) in narrow stripes. The energy bands associated with the
charged stripes develop in the middle of the Mott gap, and the splitting of
these bands can be understood by considering the QSE on a single ladder.Comment: significant revisions: includes island phase, 16 eps figures, revte
Pinned Balseiro-Falicov Model of Tunneling and Photoemission in the Cuprates
The smooth evolution of the tunneling gap of Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_8 with doping
from a pseudogap state in the underdoped cuprates to a superconducting state at
optimal and overdoping, has been interpreted as evidence that the pseudogap
must be due to precursor pairing. We suggest an alternative explanation, that
the smoothness reflects a hidden SO(N) symmetry near the (pi,0) points of the
Brillouin zone (with N = 3, 4, 5, or 6). Because of this symmetry, the
pseudogap could actually be due to any of a number of nesting instabilities,
including charge or spin density waves or more exotic phases. We present a
detailed analysis of this competition for one particular model: the pinned
Balseiro-Falicov model of competing charge density wave and (s-wave)
superconductivity. We show that most of the anomalous features of both
tunneling and photoemission follow naturally from the model, including the
smooth crossover, the general shape of the pseudogap phase diagram, the
shrinking Fermi surface of the pseudogap phase, and the asymmetry of the
tunneling gap away from optimal doping. Below T_c, the sharp peak at Delta_1
and the dip seen in the tunneling and photoemission near 2Delta_1 cannot be
described in detail by this model, but we suggest a simple generalization to
account for inhomogeneity, which does provide an adequate description. We show
that it should be possible, with a combination of photoemission and tunneling,
to demonstrate the extent of pinning of the Fermi level to the Van Hove
singularity. A preliminary analysis of the data suggests pinning in the
underdoped, but not in the overdoped regime.Comment: 18 pages LaTeX, 26 ps. figure
Dispersion of Ordered Stripe Phases in the Cuprates
A phase separation model is presented for the stripe phase of the cuprates,
which allows the doping dependence of the photoemission spectra to be
calculated. The idealized limit of a well-ordered array of magnetic and charged
stripes is analyzed, including effects of long-range Coulomb repulsion.
Remarkably, down to the limit of two-cell wide stripes, the dispersion can be
interpreted as essentially a superposition of the two end-phase dispersions,
with superposed minigaps associated with the lattice periodicity. The largest
minigap falls near the Fermi level; it can be enhanced by proximity to a (bulk)
Van Hove singularity. The calculated spectra are dominated by two features --
this charge stripe minigap plus the magnetic stripe Hubbard gap. There is a
strong correlation between these two features and the experimental
photoemission results of a two-peak dispersion in LaSrCuO, and
the peak-dip-hump spectra in BiSrCaCuO. The
differences are suggestive of the role of increasing stripe fluctuations. The
1/8 anomaly is associated with a quantum critical point, here expressed as a
percolation-like crossover. A model is proposed for the limiting minority
magnetic phase as an isolated two-leg ladder.Comment: 24 pages, 26 PS figure
Cross-oncopanel study reveals high sensitivity and accuracy with overall analytical performance depending on genomic regions
BackgroundTargeted sequencing using oncopanels requires comprehensive assessments of accuracy and detection sensitivity to ensure analytical validity. By employing reference materials characterized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration-led SEquence Quality Control project phase2 (SEQC2) effort, we perform a cross-platform multi-lab evaluation of eight Pan-Cancer panels to assess best practices for oncopanel sequencing.ResultsAll panels demonstrate high sensitivity across targeted high-confidence coding regions and variant types for the variants previously verified to have variant allele frequency (VAF) in the 5-20% range. Sensitivity is reduced by utilizing VAF thresholds due to inherent variability in VAF measurements. Enforcing a VAF threshold for reporting has a positive impact on reducing false positive calls. Importantly, the false positive rate is found to be significantly higher outside the high-confidence coding regions, resulting in lower reproducibility. Thus, region restriction and VAF thresholds lead to low relative technical variability in estimating promising biomarkers and tumor mutational burden.ConclusionThis comprehensive study provides actionable guidelines for oncopanel sequencing and clear evidence that supports a simplified approach to assess the analytical performance of oncopanels. It will facilitate the rapid implementation, validation, and quality control of oncopanels in clinical use.Peer reviewe
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy of the cuprate superconductors
This paper reviews the most recent ARPES results on the cuprate
superconductors and their insulating parent and sister compounds, with the
purpose of providing an updated summary of the extensive literature in this
field. The low energy excitations are discussed with emphasis on some of the
most relevant issues, such as the Fermi surface and remnant Fermi surface, the
superconducting gap, the pseudogap and d-wave-like dispersion, evidence of
electronic inhomogeneity and nano-scale phase separation, the emergence of
coherent quasiparticles through the superconducting transition, and many-body
effects in the one-particle spectral function due to the interaction of the
charge with magnetic and/or lattice degrees of freedom. The first part of the
paper introduces photoemission spectroscopy in the context of strongly
interacting systems, along with an update on the state-of-the-art
instrumentation. The second part provides a brief overview of the scientific
issues relevant to the investigation of the low energy electronic structure by
ARPES. The rest of the paper is devoted to the review of experimental results
from the cuprates and the discussion is organized along conceptual lines:
normal-state electronic structure, interlayer interaction, superconducting gap,
coherent superconducting peak, pseudogap, electron self energy and collective
modes. Within each topic, ARPES data from the various copper oxides are
presented.Comment: Reviews of Modern Physics, in press. A HIGH-QUALITY pdf file is
available at http://www.physics.ubc.ca/~damascel/RMP_ARPES.pd
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