1,155 research outputs found

    Luttinger liquid, singular interaction and quantum criticality in cuprate materials

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    With particular reference to the role of the renormalization group approach and Ward identities, we start by recalling some old features of the one-dimensional Luttinger liquid as the prototype of non-Fermi-liquid behavior. Its dimensional crossover to the Landau normal Fermi liquid implies that a non-Fermi liquid, as, e.g., the normal phase of the cuprate high temperature superconductors, can be maintained in d>1, only in the presence of a sufficiently singular effective interaction among the charge carriers. This is the case when, nearby an instability, the interaction is mediated by fluctuations. We are then led to introduce the specific case of superconductivity in cuprates as an example of avoided quantum criticality. We will disentangle the fluctuations which act as mediators of singular electron-electron interaction, enlightening the possible order competing with superconductivity and a mechanism for the non-Fermi-liquid behavior of the metallic phase. This paper is not meant to be a comprehensive review. Many important contributions will not be considered. We will also avoid using extensive technicalities and making full calculations for which we refer to the original papers and to the many good available reviews. We will here only follow one line of reasoning which guided our research activity in this field.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure

    Spectroscopic evidences of quantum critical charge fluctuations in cuprates

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    We calculate the optical conductivity in a clean system of quasiparticles coupled to charge-ordering collective modes. The absorption induced by these modes may produce an anomalous frequency and temperature dependence of low-energy optical absorption in some cuprates. However, the coupling with lattice degrees of freedom introduces a non-universal energy scale leading to scaling violation in low-temperature optical conductivity.Comment: Proceedings of M2S 2006. To appear in Physica

    The physics of the stripe quantum critical point in the superconducting cuprates

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    We elaborate on several observable consequences of the Quantum-Critical-Point scenario. In particular we show that the strong k-dependent scattering of the quasiparticles with the quasi-critical charge and spin fluctuations reproduces the main features of the low-energy spectral weights and of the observed Fermi surfaces. In the underdoped cuprates the attractive k-dependent charge scattering drives the formation of the pseudogap at the M points below the crossover temperature T^*. In this context we discuss models for pseudogap formation with relevant scattering in the particle-particle and particle-hole channels. The experimental consequences for the pair-fluctuation and for the pseudogap behavior are investigated.Comment: 4 pages, 2 enclosed figures, Proceedings of M2S-HTS

    Renormalization group and Ward identities in quantum liquid phases and in unconventional critical phenomena

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    By reviewing the application of the renormalization group to different theoretical problems, we emphasize the role played by the general symmetry properties in identifying the relevant running variables describing the behavior of a given physical system. In particular, we show how the constraints due to the Ward identities, which implement the conservation laws associated with the various symmetries, help to minimize the number of independent running variables. This use of the Ward identities is examined both in the case of a stable phase and of a critical phenomenon. In the first case we consider the problems of interacting fermions and bosons. In one dimension general and specific Ward identities are sufficient to show the non-Fermi-liquid character of the interacting fermion system, and also allow to describe the crossover to a Fermi liquid above one dimension. This crossover is examined both in the absence and presence of singular interaction. On the other hand, in the case of interacting bosons in the superfluid phase, the implementation of the Ward identities provides the asymptotically exact description of the acoustic low-energy excitation spectrum, and clarifies the subtle mechanism of how this is realized below and above three dimensions. As a critical phenomenon, we discuss the disorder-driven metal-insulator transition in a disordered interacting Fermi system. In this case, through the use of Ward identities, one is able to associate all the disorder effects to renormalizations of the Landau parameters. As a consequence, the occurrence of a metal-insulator transition is described as a critical breakdown of a Fermi liquid.Comment: 47 pages, 11 figure

    Gap and pseudogap evolution within the charge-ordering scenario for superconducting cuprates

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    We describe the spectral properties of underdoped cuprates as resulting from a momentum-dependent pseudogap in the normal state spectrum. Such a model accounts, within a BCS approach, for the doping dependence of the critical temperature and for the two-parameter leading-edge shift observed in the cuprates. By introducing a phenomenological temperature dependence of the pseudogap, which finds a natural interpretation within the stripe quantum-critical-point scenario for high-T_c superconductors, we reproduce also the T_c-T^* bifurcation near optimum doping. Finally, we briefly discuss the different role of the gap and the pseudogap in determining the spectral and thermodynamical properties of the model at low temperatures.Comment: 13 pages (EPY style), 7 enclosed figures, to appear on Eur. Phys. J.

    Collective transport and optical absorption near the stripe criticality

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    Within the stripe quantum critical point scenario for high TcT_c superconductors, we point out the possible direct contribution of charge collective fluctuations to the optical absorption and to the d.c. resistivity.Comment: 2 pages 2 figures 1 style fil

    Single-particle spectra near a stripe instability

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    We analyze the single-particle spectra of a bi-layered electron system near a stripe instability and compare the results with ARPES experiments on the Bi2212 cuprate superconductor near optimum doping, addressing also the issue of the puzzling absence of bonding-antibonding splitting.Comment: Proceedings of the XXII International Conference on Low Temperature Physics August 4-11, 1999, Espoo and Helsinki, Finland (minor changes to the figure) Similar results in the Proceedings of the International Workshop on ``Electronic crystals, ECRYS-99'', May 31-June 5 1999, La Colle sur Loup (France), J. Phys. IV France 9, Pr10-337 (1999

    Coherence length in superconductors from weak to strong coupling

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    We study the evolution of the superconducting coherence length ξ0\xi_0 from weak to strong coupling, both within a s-wave and a d-wave lattice model. We show that the identification of ξ0\xi_0 with the Cooper-pair size ξpair\xi_{pair} in the weak-coupling regime is meaningful only for a fully-gapped (e.g., s-wave) superconductor. Instead in the d-wave superconductor, where ξpair\xi_{pair} diverges, we show that ξ0\xi_0 is properly defined as the characteristic length scale for the correlation function of the modulus of the superconducting order parameter. The strong-coupling regime is quite intriguing, since the interplay between particle-particle and particle-hole channel is no more negligible. In the case of s-wave pairing, which allows for an analytical treatment, we show that ξ0\xi_0 is of order of the lattice spacing at finite densities. In the diluted regime ξ0\xi_0 diverges, recovering the behavior of the coherence length of a weakly interacting effective bosonic system. Similar results are expected to hold for d-wave superconductors.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Two appendices and new references adde
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