648 research outputs found
Particle-hole symmetry in the antiferromagnetic state of the cuprates
In the layered cuprate perovskites, the occurence of high-temperature
superconductivity seems deeply related to the unusual nature of the hole
excitations. The limiting case of a very small number of holes diffusing in the
antiferromagnetic (AF) background may provide important insights into this
problem. We have investigated the transport properties in a series of crystals
of , and found that the temperature dependences of the Hall
coefficient and thermopower change abruptly as soon as the AF phase
boundary is crossed. In the AF state at low temperatures , both and
are unexpectedly suppressed to nearly zero over a broad interval of . We
argue that this suppression arises from near-exact symmetry in the
particle-hole currents. From the trends in and , we infer that the
symmetry is increasingly robust as the hole density becomes very small
(). We discuss implications for electronic properties both within
the AF state and outside.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Giant Frontal Mucocele Occurring 32 Years after Frontal Bone Fracture: A Case Report
Giant mucoceles of the frontal sinus are rare but their recognition is important in the differential diagnosis of proptosis and fronto-orbital lesions. The authors describe a patient with frontal giant mucocele with intracranial as well as orbit and ethmoid sinus involvement. Thirty-two years after a frontal sinus fracture, a 51-year-old female presented with headache, and left exophthalmos and ophthalmoplegia. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a giant frontal sinus mucocele with extension into the left anterior cranial fossa. The mucocele was treated with a transcranial and endoscopic transnasal approach. The frontal sinus was then cranialized with reconstruction of the posterior wall, and finally a wide nasal drainage was performed. The clinical symptoms disappeared immediately after surgery
Doping evolution of the phonon density of states and electron-lattice interaction in NdCeCuO
We use inelastic neutron scattering to study the evolution of the generalized
phonon density of states (GDOS) of the -type high- superconductor
NdCeCuO (NCCO), from the half-filled Mott-insulator
() to the K superconductor (). Upon doping the CuO
planes in NdCuO (NCO) with electrons by Ce substitution, the
most significant change in the GDOS is the softening of the highest phonon
branches associated with the Cu-O bond stretching and out-of-plane oxygen
vibration modes. However, the softening occurs within the first few percent of
Ce-doping and is not related to the electron doping induced
nonsuperconducting-superconducting transition (NST) at . These
results suggest that the electron-lattice coupling in the -type high-
superconductors is different from that in the -type materials.Comment: 4 pages and 3 figure
Controlled Synthesis of Carbon-Encapsulated Copper Nanostructures by Using Smectite Clays as Nanotemplates
Rhomboidal and spherical metallic-copper nanostructures were encapsulated within well-formed graphitic shells by using a simple chemical method that involved the catalytic decomposition of acetylene over a copper catalyst that was supported on different smectite clays surfaces by ion-exchange. These metallic-copper nanostructures could be separated from the inorganic support and remained stable for months. The choice of the clay support influenced both the shape and the size of the synthesized Cu nanostructures. The synthesized materials and the supported catalysts from which they were produced were studied in detail by TEM and SEM, powder X-ray diffraction, thermal analysis, as well as by Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
Fermi Surface and gap parameter in high-Tc superconductors: the Stripe Quantum Critical Point scenario
We study the single-particle spectral properties of electrons coupled to
quasicritical charge and spin fluctuations close to a stripe-phase, which is
governed by a Quantum Critical Point near optimum doping. We find that spectral
weight is transferred from the quasiparticle peak to incoherent dispersive
features. As a consequence the distribution of low-laying spectral weight is
modified with respect to the quasiparticle Fermi surface. The interplay of
charge and spin fluctuations reproduces features of the observed Fermi surface,
such as the asymmetric suppression of spectral weight near the M points of the
Brillouin zone.
Within the model, we also analyze the interplay between repulsive spin and
attractive charge fluctuations in determining the symmetry and the peculiar
momentum dependence of the superconducting gap parameter. When both spin and
charge fluctuations are coupled to the electrons, we find -wave
gap symmetry in a wide range of parameter. A crossover - vs -wave
symmetry of the gap may occur when the strength of charge fluctuations
increases with respect to spin fluctuations.Comment: 18 pages, 3 included figures, to be published on Physica
The Importance of Static Correlation in the Band Structure of High Temperature Superconductors
Recently we presented a new band structure for La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO(4) and other
high temperature superconductors in which a second narrow band was seen to
cross the primary band at the Fermi level. The existence of this second Fermi
level band is in complete disagreement with the commonly accepted LDA band
structure. Yet it provided a crucial piece of physics which led to an
explanation for superconductivity and other unusual phenomena in these
materials. In this work we present details as to the nature of the failure of
conventional methods in deriving the band structure of the cuprates. In
particular, we use a number of chemical analogues to describe the problem of
static correlation in the band structure calculations and show how this can be
corrected with the predictable outcome of a Fermi level band crossing.Comment: The Journal of Physical Chemistry, in press. References and figures
updated. See www.firstprinciples.com for more information related to this
wor
A double parton scattering background to Higgs boson production at the LHC
The experimental capability of recognizing the presence of b quarks in
complex hadronic final states has addressed the attention towards final states
with b\bar{b} pairs for observing the production of the Higgs boson at the LHC,
in the intermediate Higgs mass range.We point out that double parton scattering
processes are going to represent a sizeable background to the process.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Optical and transport properties in doped two-leg ladder antiferromagnet
Within the t-J model, the optical and transport properties of the doped
two-leg ladder antiferromagnet are studied based on the fermion-spin theory. It
is shown that the optical and transport properties of the doped two-leg ladder
antiferromagnet are mainly governed by the holon scattering. The low energy
peak in the optical conductivity is located at a finite energy, while the
resistivity exhibits a crossover from the high temperature metallic-like
behavior to the low temperature insulating-like behavior, which are consistent
with the experiments.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B65
(2002) (April 15 issue
Effect of a magnetic field on the long-range magnetic order in insulating Nd2CuO4, nonsuperconducting and superconducting Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4
We have measured the effect of a c-axis aligned magnetic field on the
long-range magnetic order of insulating Nd2CuO4, as-grown nonsuperconducting
and superconducting Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4. On cooling from room temperature, Nd2CuO4
goes through a series of antiferromagnetic (AF) phase transitions with
different noncollinear spin structures. In all phases of Nd2CuO4, we find that
the applied c-axis field induces a canting of the AF order but does not alter
the basic zero-field noncollinear spin structures. Similar behavior is also
found in as-grown nonsuperconducting Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4. These results contrast
dramatically with those of superconducting Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4, where a c-axis
aligned magnetic field induces a static, anomalously conducting, long-range
ordered AF state. We confirm that the annealing process necessary to make
superconducting Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4 also induces epitaxial, three-dimensional
long-range ordered cubic (Nd,Ce)2O3 as an impurity phase. In addition, the
annealing process makes a series of quasi two-dimensional superlattice
reflections associated with lattice distortions of Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4 in the CuO2
plane. While the application of a magnetic field will induce a net moment in
the impurity phase, we determine its magnitude and eliminate this as a
possibility for the observed magnetic field-induced effect in superconducting
Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Electron Dynamics in NdCeCuO: Evidence for the Pseudogap State and Unconventional c-axis Response
Infrared reflectance measurements were made with light polarized along the a-
and c-axis of both superconducting and antiferromagnetic phases of electron
doped NdCeCuO. The results are compared to
characteristic features of the electromagnetic response in hole doped cuprates.
Within the CuO planes the frequency dependent scattering rate,
1/, is depressed below 650 cm; this behavior is a
hallmark of the pseudogap state. While in several hole doped compounds the
energy scales associated with the pseudogap and superconducting states are
quite close, we are able to show that in NdCeCuO
the two scales differ by more than one order of magnitude. Another feature of
the in-plane charge response is a peak in the real part of the conductivity,
, at 50-110 cm which is in sharp contrast with the
Drude-like response where is centered at . This
latter effect is similar to what is found in disordered hole doped cuprates and
is discussed in the context of carrier localization. Examination of the c-axis
conductivity gives evidence for an anomalously broad frequency range from which
the interlayer superfluid is accumulated. Compelling evidence for the pseudogap
state as well as other characteristics of the charge dynamics in
NdCeCuO signal global similarities of the cuprate
phase diagram with respect to electron and hole doping.Comment: Submitted to PR
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