53 research outputs found
Intrinsic tunneling or Joule heating?
It is shown that the `tunnelling spectra' reported by Yurgens et al. could be
reproduced qualitatively and quantitatively using the experimental out-of-plane
normal state resistance R(T) and assuming that the heating of the mesa, caused
by the Joule dissipation, is the only reason for effects observed at high bias.Comment: Comment on 'Intrinsic Tunneling Spectra of Bi2201 by A.Yurgens et
al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 147005, (2003); typo correcte
The "normal" state of superconducting cuprates might really be normal after all
High magnetic field studies of cuprate superconductors revealed a non-BCS
temperature dependence of the upper critical field determined
resistively by several groups.
These determinations caused some doubts on the grounds of both the
contrasting effect of the magnetic field on the in-plane and out-of-plane
resistances reported for large Bi2212 sample and the large Nernst signal
\emph{well above} .
Here we present both and of tiny Bi2212 crystals
in magnetic fields up to 50 Tesla.
None of our measurements revealed a situation when on the field increase
reaches its maximum while remains very small if not zero.
The resistive %upper critical fields estimated from the in-plane and
out-of-plane estimated from and are
approximately the same. Our results support any theory of cuprates that
describes the state above the resistive phase transition as perfectly normal
with a zero off-diagonal order parameter. In particular, the anomalous Nernst
effect above the resistive phase transition in high- cuprates can be
described quantitatively as a normal state phenomenon in a model with itinerant
and localised fermions and/or charged bosons
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