355 research outputs found
Experimental Electronic Structure and Interband Nesting in BaVS_3
The correlated 3d sulphide BaVS_3 is a most interesting compound because of
the apparent coexistence of one-dimensional and three-dimensional properties.
Our experiments explain this puzzle and shed new light on its electronic
structure. High-resolution angle-resolved photoemission measurements in a 4eV
wide range below the Fermi level explored the coexistence of weakly correlated
a_1g wide-band and strongly correlated e_g narrow-band d-electrons that is
responsible for the complicated behavior of this material. The most relevant
result is the evidence for a_1g--e_g inter-band nesting condition.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Optical evidence for the proximity to a spin-density-wave metallic state in NaCoO
We present the optical properties of \na single crystals, measured over a
broad spectral range as a function of temperature (). The capability to
cover the energy range from the far-infrared up to the ultraviolet allows us to
perform reliable Kramers-Kronig transformation, in order to obtain the
absorption spectrum (i.e., the complex optical conductivity). To the complex
optical conductivity we apply the generalized Drude model, extracting the
frequency dependence of the scattering rate () and effective mass
() of the itinerant charge carriers. We find that at low temperatures and for . This suggests that \na is at
the verge of a spin-density-wave metallic phase
Two Ising-like magnetic excitations in a single-layer cuprate superconductor
There exists increasing evidence that the phase diagram of the
high-transition temperature (Tc) cuprate superconductors is controlled by a
quantum critical point. One distinct theoretical proposal is that, with
decreasing hole-carrier concentration, a transition occurs to an ordered state
with two circulating orbital currents per CuO2 square. Below the 'pseudogap'
temperature T* (T* > Tc), the theory predicts a discrete order parameter and
two weakly-dispersive magnetic excitations in structurally simple compounds
that should be measurable by neutron scattering. Indeed, novel magnetic order
and one such excitation were recently observed. Here, we demonstrate for
tetragonal HgBa2CuO4+d the existence of a second excitation with local
character, consistent with the theory. The excitations mix with conventional
antiferromagnetic fluctuations, which points toward a unifying picture of
magnetism in the cuprates that will likely require a multi-band description.Comment: Including supplementary informatio
Universal sheet resistance and revised phase diagram of the cuprate high-temperature superconductors
Upon introducing charge carriers into the copper-oxygen sheets of the
enigmatic lamellar cuprates the ground state evolves from an insulator into a
superconductor, and eventually into a seemingly conventional metal (a Fermi
liquid). Much has remained elusive about the nature of this evolution and about
the peculiar metallic state at intermediate hole-carrier concentrations (p).
The planar resistivity of this unconventional metal exhibits a linear
temperature dependence (\rho T) that is disrupted upon cooling toward
the superconducting state by the opening of a partial gap (the pseudogap) on
the Fermi surface. Here we first demonstrate for the quintessential compound
HgBaCuO a dramatic switch from linear to purely quadratic
(Fermi-liquid-like, \rho T) resistive behavior in the pseudogap
regime. Despite the considerable variation in crystal structures and disorder
among different compounds, our result together with prior work gives new
insight into the p-T phase diagram and reveals the fundamental resistance per
copper-oxygen sheet in both linear (\rho_S = A_{1S} T) and quadratic (\rho_S =
A_{2S} T) regimes, with A_{1S} A_{2S} 1/p. Theoretical
models can now be benchmarked against this remarkably simple universal
behavior. Deviations from this underlying behavior can be expected to lead to
new insights into the non-universal features exhibited by certain compounds
Hall, Seebeck, and Nernst Coefficients of Underdoped HgBa2CuO4+d: Fermi-Surface Reconstruction in an Archetypal Cuprate Superconductor
Charge density-wave order has been observed in cuprate superconductors whose
crystal structure breaks the square symmetry of the CuO2 planes, such as
orthorhombic YBa2Cu3Oy (YBCO), but not so far in cuprates that preserve that
symmetry, such as tetragonal HgBa2CuO4+d (Hg1201). We have measured the Hall
(R_H), Seebeck (S), and Nernst coefficients of underdoped Hg1201 in magnetic
fields large enough to suppress superconductivity. The high-field R_H(T) and
S(T) are found to drop with decreasing temperature and become negative, as also
observed in YBCO at comparable doping. In YBCO, the negative R_H and S are
signatures of a small electron pocket caused by Fermi-surface reconstruction,
attributed to charge density-wave modulations observed in the same range of
doping and temperature. We deduce that a similar Fermi-surface reconstruction
takes place in Hg1201, evidence that density-wave order exists in this
material. A striking similarity is also found in the normal-state Nernst
coefficient, further supporting this interpretation. Given the model nature of
Hg1201, Fermi-surface reconstruction appears to be common to all hole-doped
cuprates, suggesting that density-wave order is a fundamental property of these
materials
Optical and thermodynamic properties of the high-temperature superconductor HgBa_2CuO_4+delta
In- and out-of-plane optical spectra and specific heat measurements for the
single layer cuprate superconductor Hg-1201 at optimal doping (Tc = 97 K) are
presented. Both the in-plane and out-of-plane superfluid density agree well
with a recently proposed scaling relation rho_{s}=sigma_{dc}T_{c}. It is shown
that there is a superconductivity induced increase of the in-plane low
frequency spectral weight which follows the trend found in underdoped and
optimally doped Bi-2212 and optimally doped Bi-2223. We observe an increase of
optical spectral weight which corresponds to a change in kinetic energy of
approximately 0.5 meV/Cu which is more than enough to explain the condensation
energy. The specific heat anomaly is 10 times smaller than in YBCO and 3 times
smaller than in Bi-2212. The shape of the anomaly is similar to the one
observed in YBCO showing that the superconducting transition is governed by
thermal fluctuations.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
Sign reversals of the quantum Hall effect and helicoidal magnetic-field-induced spin-density waves in quasi-one-dimensional organic conductors
We study the effect of umklapp scattering on the magnetic-field-induced
spin-density-wave phases, which are experimentally observed in the
quasi-one-dimensional organic conductors of the Bechgaard salts family. Within
the framework of the quantized nesting model, we show that umklapp processes
may naturally explain sign reversals of the quantum Hall effect (QHE) observed
in these conductors. Moreover, umklapp scattering can change the polarization
of the spin-density wave (SDW) from linear (sinusoidal SDW) to circular
(helicoidal SDW). The QHE vanishes in the helicoidal phases, but a
magnetoelectric effect appears. These two characteristic properties may be
utilized to detect the magnetic-field-induced helicoidal SDW phases
experimentally.Comment: 4 pages, latex, 3 figure
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