414 research outputs found
Failure of Scattering Interference in the Pseudogap State of Cuprate Superconductors
We calculate scattering interference patterns for various electronic states
proposed for the pseudogap regime of the cuprate superconductors. The
scattering interference models all produce patterns whose wavelength changes as
a function of energy, in contradiction to the energy-independent wavelength
seen by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments in the pseudogap state.
This suggests that the patterns seen in STM local density of states
measurements are not due to scattering interference, but are rather the result
of some form of ordering.Comment: To be submitted to Phys. Rev.
Inhomogeneous states with checkerboard order in the t-J Model
We study inhomogeneous states in the t-J model using an unrestricted
Gutzwiller approximation. We find that checkerboard order, where
is a doping dependent number, emerges from Fermi surface instabilities of
both the staggered flux phase and the Fermi liquid state with realistic band
parameters. In both cases, the checkerboard order develops at wave vectors
, that are tied to the peaks of the
wave-vector dependent susceptibility, and is of the Lomer-Rice-Scott type. The
properties of such periodic, inhomogeneous states are discussed in connection
to the checkerboard patterns observed by STM in underdoped cuprates.Comment: Published Versio
Many-Impurity Effects in Fourier Transform Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy
Fourier transform scanning tunneling spectroscopy (FTSTS) is a useful
technique for extracting details of the momentum-resolved electronic band
structure from inhomogeneities in the local density of states due to
disorder-related quasiparticle scattering. To a large extent, current
understanding of FTSTS is based on models of Friedel oscillations near isolated
impurities. Here, a framework for understanding many-impurity effects is
developed based on a systematic treatment of the variance Delta rho^2(q,omega)
of the Fourier transformed local density of states rho(q,\omega). One important
consequence of this work is a demonstration that the poor signal-to-noise ratio
inherent in rho(q,omega) due to randomness in impurity positions can be
eliminated by configuration averaging Delta rho^2(q,omega). Furthermore, we
develop a diagrammatic perturbation theory for Delta rho^2(q,omega) and show
that an important bulk quantity, the mean-free-path, can be extracted from
FTSTS experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. A version of the paper with high resolution,
colour figures is available at
http://www.trentu.ca/physics/batkinson/FTSTS.ps.gz minor revisions in
response to refree report + figure 5 is modifie
Surface pinning of fluctuating charge order: an "extraordinary" surface phase transition
We study the mean-field theory of charge-density wave (CDW) order in a
layered system, including the effect of the long-range Coulomb interaction and
of screening by uncondensed electrons. We particularly focus on the conditions
necessary for an ``extraordinary'' transition, in which the surface orders at a
higher temperature, and is more likely to be commensurate, than the bulk. We
interpret recent experiments on NaCCOC as indicating the presence of
commensurate CDW at the surface that is not present in the bulk. More
generally, we show that poor screening of the Coulomb interaction tends to
stabilize incommensurate order, possibly explaining why the CDW order in LSCO
and NbSe2 remains incommensurate to T -> 0, despite the small magnitude of the
incommensurability.Comment: 9 pages, no figures, 31 references; 1 new figure and minor editing of
the tex
Studies of contribution of metals bonded with organic matter of seawater to the fluxes of total dissolved metals across water-sediment interface at Vistula Lagoon of Baltic Sea
© 2004 IEEE. Investigations of fluxes of a dissolved element across the water-sediment interface in Vistula Lagoon (Baltic Sea) were carried out in August 2001 and 2002, using chamber experiments. Oxygen, iron(II), total dissolved iron, manganese, copper and lead fluxes were calculated. For the first time the fluxes of metals bonded with organic matter of sea water were studied. The contribution of metals bonded with organic matter to the total flux was varied depending upon conditions and may reach up to 70 %. It was found that metal fluxes at the coastal zone are larger than at the center of the lagoon by the factor of 2-4
Studies of fluxes of dissolved iron and manganese in the Gulf of Finland
© 2004 IEEE. Metal fluxes (total dissolved iron and manganese) across the water-sediment interface were studied in situ in the Gulf of Finland in June 2002 and 2003 using an autonomous benthic lander. Distribution of these metals in the sediment and the porewater was also investigated. Focus was given to understand the behavior of the studied metals at various redox conditions and the influence when sediment resuspension is occurring. Our data indicate the importance of the redox conditions for the iron fluxes with no fluxes at oxic, intermediate at anoxic and high fluxes at suboxic conditions. The fluxes of manganese do not seem to have any correlation with the oxygen levels. Both metals were significantly affected by resuspension, which led to a rapid release
STM/STS Study on 4a X 4a Electronic Charge Order of Superconducting Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+d
We performed low-bias STM measurements on underdoped Bi2212 crystals, and
confirmed that a two-dimensional (2D) superstructure with a periodicity of four
lattice constants (4a) is formed within the Cu-O plane at T<Tc. This 4a X 4a
superstructure, oriented along the Cu-O bonding direction, is nondispersive and
more intense in lightly doped samples with a zero temperature pseudogap (ZTPG)
than in samples with a d-wave gap. The nondispersive 4a X 4a superstructure was
clearly observed within the ZTPG or d-wave gap, while it tended to fade out
outside the gaps. The present results provide a useful test for various models
proposed for an electronic order hidden in the underdoped region of high-Tc
cuprates.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
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