113 research outputs found

    Anomalies of the infrared-active phonons in underdoped YBCO as an evidence for the intra-bilayer Josephson effect

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    The spectra of the far-infrared c-axis conductivity of underdoped YBCO crystals exhibit dramatic changes of some of the phonon peaks when going from the normal to the superconducting state. We show that the most striking of these anomalies can be naturally explained by changes of the local fields acting on the ions arising from the onset of inter- and intra-bilayer Josephson effects.Comment: Revtex, epsf, 6 pages, 3 figures encapsulated in tex

    Quantum mechanical picture of the coupling between interlayer electronic excitations and infrared active phonons in bilayer cuprate superconductors

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    The formula frequently used to describe the c-axis infrared response of the coupled electron-phonon system of bilayer cuprate superconductors and providing important insights into the physics of these materials has been originally obtained at the level of the phenomenological multilayer model. Here we derive it using diagrammatic perturbation theory

    Approximate tight-binding sum rule for the superconductivity related change of c-axis kinetic energy in multilayer cuprate superconductors

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    We present an extension of the c-axis tight-binding sum rule discussed by Chakravarty, Kee, and Abrahams [Phys. Rev. Lett. 82, 2366 (1999)] that applies to multilayer high-Tc cuprate superconductors (HTCS) and use it to estimate--from available infrared data--the change below Tc of the c-axis kinetic energy, Hc, in YBa2Cu3O(7-delta) (delta=0.45,0.25,0.07), Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8, and Bi2Sr2Ca2Cu3O10. In all these compounds Hc decreases below Tc and except for Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 the change of Hc is of the same order of magnitude as the condensation energy. This observation supports the hypothesis that in multilayer HTCS superconductivity is considerably amplified by the interlayer tunnelling mechanism.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure

    Selfconsistent gauge-invariant theory of in-plane infrared response of high-Tc cuprate superconductors involving spin fluctuations

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    We report on results of our theoretical study of the in-plane infrared conductivity of the high-Tc cuprate superconductors using the model where charged planar quasiparticles are coupled to spin fluctuations. The computations include both the renormalization of the quasiparticles and the corresponding modification of the current-current vertex function (vertex correction), which ensures gauge invariance of the theory and local charge conservation in the system. The incorporation of the vertex corrections leads to an increase of the total intraband optical spectral weight (SW) at finite frequencies, a SW transfer from far infrared to mid infrared, a significant reduction of the SW of the superconducting condensate, and an amplification of characteristic features in the superconducting state spectra of the inverse scattering rate 1/tau. We also discuss the role of selfconsistency and propose a new interpretation of a kink occurring in the experimental low temperature spectra of 1/tau around 1000cm^{-1}.Comment: 9 pages with 6 figures, submitted to Physical Review

    Interpretation of the in-plane infrared response of the high-Tc cuprate superconductors involving spin fluctuations revisited

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    The in-plane infrared response of the high-Tc cuprate superconductors was studied using the spin-fermion model, where charged quasiparticles of the copper-oxygen planes are coupled to spin fluctuations. First, we analyzed structures of the superconducting-state conductivity reflecting the coupling of the quasiparticles to the resonance mode observed by neutron scattering. The conductivity computed with the input spin susceptibility in the simple form of the mode exhibits two prominent features: an onset of the real part of the conductivity starting around the frequency of the mode omega_{0} and a maximum of a related function W(omega), roughly proportional to the second derivative of the scattering rate, centered approximately at omega=omega_{0}+Delta_{0}/hbar, where Delta_{0} is the maximum value of the superconducting gap. The two structures are well known from earlier studies. Their physical meaning, however, has not been sufficiently elucidated thus far. Our analysis involving quasiparticle spectral functions provides a clear interpretation. Second, we explored the role played by the spin-fluctuation continuum. Third, we investigated the temperature dependence of the conductivity, of the intraband spectral weight, and of the effective kinetic energy. The changes of the latter two quantities below Tc are determined by the formation of the gap, by a feedback effect of the spin fluctuations on the quasiparticles, and by a significant shift of the chemical potential.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Physical Review

    Extracting the electron--boson spectral function α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) from infrared and photoemission data using inverse theory

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    We present a new method of extracting electron-boson spectral function α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) from infrared and photoemission data. This procedure is based on inverse theory and will be shown to be superior to previous techniques. Numerical implementation of the algorithm is presented in detail and then used to accurately determine the doping and temperature dependence of the spectral function in several families of high-Tc_c superconductors. Principal limitations of extracting α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) from experimental data will be pointed out. We directly compare the IR and ARPES α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) and discuss the resonance structure in the spectra in terms of existing theoretical models

    Spectroscopic distinction between the normal state pseudogap and the superconducting gap of cuprate high T_{c} superconductors

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    We report on broad-band infrared ellipsometry measurements of the c-axis conductivity of underdoped RBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{7-d} (R=Y, Nd, and La) single crystals. Our data provide a detailed account of the spectral weight (SW) redistributions due to the normal state pseudogap (PG) and the superconducting (SC) gap. They show that these phenomena involve different energy scales, exhibit distinct doping dependencies and thus are likely of different origin. In particular, the SW redistribution in the PG state closely resembles the one of a conventional charge- or spin density wave (CDW or SDW) system.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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