5,370 research outputs found

    Theory of High-Tc Superconducting Cuprates Based on Experimental Evidence

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    A model of superconductivity in layered high-temperature superconducting cuprates is proposed, based on the extended saddle point singularities in the electron spectrum, weak screening of the Coulomb interaction and phonon-mediated interaction between electrons plus a small short -range repulsion of Hund's, or spin-fluctuation, origin. This permits to explain the large values of TcTc, features of the isotope effect on oxygen and copper, the existence of two types of the order parameter, the peak in the inelastic neutron scattering, the positive curvature of the upper critical field, as function of temperature etc.Comment: RevTeX 3.x, 11 Postscript figures (included); send comments to [email protected]

    Origin and roles of a strong electron-phonon interaction in cuprate oxide superconductors

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    A strong electron-phonon interaction arises from the modulation of the superexchange interaction by phonons. As is studied in Phys. Rev. B 70, 184514 (2004), Cu-O bond stretching modes can be soft around (pm pi/a, 0) and (0, pm pi/a), with a the lattice constant of CuO_2 planes. In the critical region of SDW, where antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations are developed around nesting wave numbers Q of the Fermi surface, the stretching modes can also be soft around 2Q. Almost symmetric energy dependences of the 2Q component of the density of states, which are observed in the so called stripe and checker-board states, cannot be explained by CDW with 2Q following the complete softening of the 2Q modes, but they can be explained by a second-harmonic effect of SDW with Q. The strong electron-phonon interaction can play no or only a minor role in the occurrence of superconductivity.Comment: 5 pages, 1 fugur

    Implications of the isotope effects on the magnetization, magnetic torque and susceptibility

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    We analyze the magnetization, magnetic torque and susceptibility data of La2-xSrxCu(16,18)O4 and YBa2(63,65)CuO7-x near Tc in terms of the universal 3D-XY scaling relations. It is shown that the isotope effect on Tc mirrors that on the anisotropy. Invoking the generic behavior of the anisotropy the doping dependence of the isotope effects on the critical properties, including Tc, correlation lengths and magnetic penetration depths are traced back to a change of the mobile carrier concentration.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Isotope Effect in the Superfluid Density of HTS Cuprates: Stripes, Pseudogap and Impurities

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    Underdoped cuprates exhibit a normal-state pseudogap, and their spins and doped carriers tend to spatially separate into 1- or 2-D stripes. Some view these as central to superconductivity, others as peripheral and merely competing. Using La2x_{2-x}Srx_xCu1y_{1-y}Zny_yO4_4 we show that an oxygen isotope effect in TcT_c and in the superfluid density can be used to distinguish between the roles of stripes and pseudogap and also to detect the presence of impurity scattering. We conclude that stripes and pseudogap are distinct, and both compete and coexist with superconductivity.Comment: Revised submission to PRL with added appendix on a possible isotope effect in the effective mass, 4 pages, 3 figure

    Pressure dependence of the oxygen isotope effect in YBa2_2Cu4_4O8_8

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    We have carried out measurements of the pressure dependence to 1.2 GPa of the oxygen isotope effect on TcT_c in the high-TcT_c superconductor YBa2_2Cu4_4O8_8 using a clamp cell in a SQUID magnetometer. This compound lies close to, but just above, the 1/8th^{th} doping point where in La2x_{2-x}Srx_xCuO4_4 marked anomalies in isotope effects occur. Both isotopes show the same very large pressure dependence of TcT_c with the result that the isotope exponent remains low (\sim0.08) but increases slightly with increasing pressure. This is discussed in terms of stripe suppression, a competing pseudogap and the effect of superconducting fluctuations.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Intrinsic and structural isotope effects in Fe-based superconductors

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    The currently available results of the isotope effect on the superconducting transition temperature T_c in Fe-based high-temperature superconductors (HTS) are highly controversial. The values of the Fe isotope effect (Fe-IE) exponent \alpha_Fe for various families of Fe-based HTS were found to be as well positive, as negative, or even be exceedingly larger than the BCS value \alpha_BCS=0.5. Here we demonstrate that the Fe isotope substitution causes small structural modifications which, in turn, affect T_c. Upon correcting the isotope effect exponent for these structural effects, an almost unique value of \alpha~0.35-0.4 is observed for at least three different families of Fe-based HTS.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Pairing in Cu-O Models: Clues of Joint Electron-Phonon and Electron-Electron Interactions

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    We discuss a many-electron Hamiltonian with Hubbard-like repulsive interaction and linear coupling to the phonon branches, having the Cu-O plane of the superconducting cuprates as a paradigm. A canonical transformation extracts an effective two-body problem from the many-body theory. As a prototype system we study the \cu cluster, which yields electronic pairing in the Hubbard model; moreover, a standard treatment of the Jahn-Teller effect predicts distortions that destroy electronic pairing. Remarkably, calculations that keep all the electronic spectrum into account show that vibrations are likely to be synergic with electronic pairing, if the coupling to half-breathing modes predominates, as experiments suggest.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.

    Superconductivity and superconducting order parameter phase fluctuations in a weakly doped antiferromagnet

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    The superconducting properties of a recently proposed phenomenological model for a weakly doped antiferromagnet are analyzed, taking into account fluctuations of the phase of the order parameter. In this model, we assume that the doped charge carriers can't move out of the antiferromagnetic sublattice they were introduced. This case corresponds to the free carrier spectra with the maximum at k=(±π/2,±π/2){\bf k}=(\pm \pi /2 ,\pm \pi /2), as it was observed in ARPES experiments in some of the cuprates in the insulating state [1]. The doping dependence of the superconducting gap and the temperature-carrier density phase diagram of the model are studied in the case of the dx2y2d_{x^{2}-y^{2}} pairing symmetry and different values of the effective coupling. A possible relevance of the results to the experiments on high-temperature superconductors is discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure

    Oxygen isotope effect on the in-plane penetration depth in underdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} single crystals

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    We report measurements of the oxygen isotope effect (OIE) on the in-plane penetration depth \lambda_{ab}(0) in underdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} single crystals. A highly sensitive magnetic torque sensor with a resolution of \Delta \tau ~ 10^{-12} Nm was used for the magnetic measurements on microcrystals with a mass of ~ 10 microg. The OIE on \lambda_{ab}^{-2}(0) is found to be -10(2)% for x = 0.080 and -8(1)% for x = 0.086. It arises mainly from the oxygen mass dependence of the in-plane effective mass m_{ab}*. The present results suggest that lattice vibrations are important for the occurrence of high temperature superconductivity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR

    Conceptualizing throughput legitimacy: procedural mechanisms of accountability, transparency, inclusiveness and openness in EU governance

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    This symposium demonstrates the potential for throughput legitimacy as a concept for shedding empirical light on the strengths and weaknesses of multi-level governance, as well as challenging the concept theoretically. This article introduces the symposium by conceptualizing throughput legitimacy as an ‘umbrella concept’, encompassing a constellation of normative criteria not necessarily empirically interrelated. It argues that in order to interrogate multi-level governance processes in all their complexity, it makes sense for us to develop normative standards that are not naïve about the empirical realities of how power is exercised within multilevel governance, or how it may interact with legitimacy. We argue that while throughput legitimacy has its normative limits, it can be substantively useful for these purposes. While being no replacement for input and output legitimacy, throughput legitimacy offers distinctive normative criteria— accountability, transparency, inclusiveness and openness— and points towards substantive institutional reforms.Published versio
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