397 research outputs found

    New insight into the physics of iron pnictides from optical and penetration depth data

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    We report theoretical values for the unscreened plasma frequencies Omega_p of several Fe pnictides obtained from DFT based calculations within the LDA and compare them with experimental plasma frequencies obtained from reflectivity data. The sizable renormalization observed for all considered compounds points to the presence of many-body effects beyond the LDA. From the large empirical background dielectric constant of about 12-15, we estimate a large arsenic polarizability of about 9.5 +- 1.2 Angstroem^3 where the details depend on the polarizabilities of the remaining ions taken from the literature. This large polarizability can significantly reduce the value of the Coulomb repulsion U_d about 4 eV on iron known from iron oxides to a level of 2 eV or below. In general, this result points to rather strong polaronic effects as suggested by G.A. Sawatzky et al., in Refs. arXiv:0808.1390 and arXiv:0811.0214 (Berciu et al.). Possible consequences for the conditions of a formation of bipolarons are discussed, too. From the extrapolated muon spin rotation penetration depth data at T= 0 and the experimental Omega_p we estimate the total coupling constant lambda_tot for the el-boson interaction within the Eliashberg-theory adopting a single band approximation. For LaFeAsO_0.9F_0.1 a weak to intermediately strong coupling regime and a quasi-clean limit behaviour are found. For a pronounced multiband case we obtain a constraint for various intraband coupling constants which in principle allows for a sizable strong coupling in bands with either slow electrons or holes.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physics (30.01.2009

    Resistivity saturation revisited: results from a dynamical mean field theory

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    We use the dynamical mean field method to study the high-temperature resistivity of electrons strongly coupled to phonons. The results reproduce the qualtiative behavior of the temperature and disorder dependence of the resistivity of the 'A-15' materials, which is commonly described in terms of saturation, but imply that the resistivity does not saturate. Rather, a change in temperature dependence occurs when the scattering becomes strong enough to cause a breakdown of the Migdal approximation.Comment: Minor revisions in response to referee report; latex error corrected so paper prints properl

    Fluctuation effects of gauge fields in the slave-boson t-J model

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    We present a quantitative study of the charge-spin separation(CSS) phenomenon in a U(1) gauge theory of the t-J model of high-Tc superconductures. We calculate the critical temperature of confinement-deconfinement phase transition below which the CSS takes place.Comment: Latex, 9 pages, 3 figure

    Aluminum Oxide Layers as Possible Components for Layered Tunnel Barriers

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    We have studied transport properties of Nb/Al/AlOx/Nb tunnel junctions with ultrathin aluminum oxide layers formed by (i) thermal oxidation and (ii) plasma oxidation, before and after rapid thermal post-annealing of the completed structures at temperatures up to 550 deg C. Post-annealing at temperatures above 300 deg C results in a significant decrease of the tunneling conductance of thermally-grown barriers, while plasma-grown barriers start to change only at annealing temperatures above 450 deg C. Fitting the experimental I-V curves of the junctions using the results of the microscopic theory of direct tunneling shows that the annealing of thermally-grown oxides at temperatures above 300 deg C results in a substantial increase of their average tunnel barriers height, from ~1.8 eV to ~2.45 eV, versus the practically unchanged height of ~2.0 eV for plasma-grown layers. This difference, together with high endurance of annealed barriers under electric stress (breakdown field above 10 MV/cm) may enable all-AlOx and SiO2/AlOx layered "crested" barriers for advanced floating-gate memory applications.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure

    Spin-gap effect on resistivity in the t-J model

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    We calculate the spin-gap effect on dc resistivity in the t-J model of high-TcT_{\rm c} cuprates by using the Ginzburg-Landau theory coupled with a gauge field as its effective field theory to get ρ(T)T{1c(TT)d}\rho(T) \propto T \{1-c\:(T^* -T)^d \}, where TT^* is the spin-gap onset temperature. By taking the compactness of massive gauge field into account, the exponent dd deviates from its mean-field value 1/2 and becomes a nonuniversal TT-dependent quantity, which improves the correspondence with the experiments.Comment: 4 pages, REVTeX format, 2 eps-figure

    Local Magnetic Order vs. Superconductivity in a Layered Cuprate

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    We report on the phase diagram for charge-stripe order in La(1.6-x)Nd(0.4)Sr(x)CuO(4), determined by neutron and x-ray scattering studies and resistivity measurements. From an analysis of the in-plane resistivity motivated by recent nuclear-quadrupole-resonance studies, we conclude that the transition temperature for local charge ordering decreases monotonically with x, and hence that local antiferromagnetic order is uniquely correlated with the anomalous depression of superconductivity at x = 1/8. This result is consistent with theories in which superconductivity depends on the existence of charge-stripe correlations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; introduction revised, Fig. 3 removed, last figure replace

    Image of the Energy Gap Anisotropy in the Vibrational Spectum of a High Temperature Superconductor

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    We present a new method of determining the anisotropy of the gap function in layered high-Tc superconductors. Careful inelastic neutron scattering measurements at low temperature of the phonon dispersion curves in the (100) direction in La_(1.85)Sr_(.15)CuO_4 would determine whether the gap is predominately s-wave or d-wave. We also propose an experiment to determine the gap at each point on a quasi-two-dimensional Fermi surface.Comment: 12 pages + 2 figures (included

    Change of the Ground State upon Hole Doping Unveiled by Ni Impurity in High-TcT_{\rm c} Cuprates

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    The electronic ground state in high-TcT_{\rm c} cuprates where the superconducting state is suppressed by Ni substitution has been investigated in La2x_{2-x}Srx_xCu1y_{1-y}Niy_yO4_4 from the specific heat and muon spin relaxation measurements. It has been found that the ground state changes from a magnetically ordered state with the strong hole-trapping by Ni to a metallic state with the Kondo effect of Ni with increasing hole-concentration. Moreover, the analysis of the results has revealed that a phase separation into the magnetically ordered phase and the metallic phase occurs around the boundary of two phases.Comment: 11pages, 4 figure

    Role of Umklapp Processes in Conductivity of Doped Two-Leg Ladders

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    Recent conductivity measurements performed on the hole-doped two-leg ladder material Sr14xCaxCu24O41\mathrm{Sr_{14-x}Ca_xCu_{24}O_{41}} reveal an approximately linear power law regime in the c-axis DC resistivity as a function of temperature for x=11x=11. In this work, we employ a bosonic model to argue that umklapp processes are responsible for this feature and for the high spectral weight in the optical conductivity which occurs beyond the finite frequency Drude-like peak. Including quenched disorder in our model allows us to reproduce experimental conductivity and resistivity curves over a wide range of energies. We also point out the differences between the effect of umklapp processes in a single chain and in the two-leg ladder.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
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