27 research outputs found
Angle-dependence of quantum oscillations in YBa2Cu3O6.59 shows free spin behaviour of quasiparticles
Measurements of quantum oscillations in the cuprate superconductors afford a
new opportunity to assess the extent to which the electronic properties of
these materials yield to a description rooted in Fermi liquid theory. However,
such an analysis is hampered by the small number of oscillatory periods
observed. Here we employ a genetic algorithm to globally model the field,
angular, and temperature dependence of the quantum oscillations observed in the
resistivity of YBa2Cu3O6.59. This approach successfully fits an entire data set
to a Fermi surface comprised of two small, quasi-2-dimensional cylinders. A key
feature of the data is the first identification of the effect of Zeeman
splitting, which separates spin-up and spin-down contributions, indicating that
the quasiparticles in the cuprates behave as nearly free spins, constraining
the source of the Fermi surface reconstruction to something other than a
conventional spin density wave with moments parallel to the CuO2 planes.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Neutron Scattering and Its Application to Strongly Correlated Systems
Neutron scattering is a powerful probe of strongly correlated systems. It can
directly detect common phenomena such as magnetic order, and can be used to
determine the coupling between magnetic moments through measurements of the
spin-wave dispersions. In the absence of magnetic order, one can detect diffuse
scattering and dynamic correlations. Neutrons are also sensitive to the
arrangement of atoms in a solid (crystal structure) and lattice dynamics
(phonons). In this chapter, we provide an introduction to neutrons and neutron
sources. The neutron scattering cross section is described and formulas are
given for nuclear diffraction, phonon scattering, magnetic diffraction, and
magnon scattering. As an experimental example, we describe measurements of
antiferromagnetic order, spin dynamics, and their evolution in the
La(2-x)Ba(x)CuO(4) family of high-temperature superconductors.Comment: 31 pages, chapter for "Strongly Correlated Systems: Experimental
Techniques", edited by A. Avella and F. Mancin
Bounding the pseudogap with a line of phase transitions in YBCO cuprate superconductors
Close to optimal doping, the copper oxide superconductors show 'strange
metal' behavior, suggestive of strong fluctuations associated with a quantum
critical point. Such a critical point requires a line of classical phase
transitions terminating at zero temperature near optimal doping inside the
superconducting 'dome'. The underdoped region of the temperature-doping phase
diagram from which superconductivity emerges is referred to as the 'pseudogap'
because evidence exists for partial gapping of the conduction electrons, but so
far there is no compelling thermodynamic evidence as to whether the pseudogap
is a distinct phase or a continuous evolution of physical properties on
cooling. Here we report that the pseudogap in YBCO cuprate superconductors is a
distinct phase, bounded by a line of phase transitions. The doping dependence
of this line is such that it terminates at zero temperature inside the
superconducting dome. From this we conclude that quantum criticality drives the
strange metallic behavior and therefore superconductivity in the cuprates
Recommended from our members
NMR study of in-plane twofold ordering in URu(2)Si(2).
We report (29)Si NMR spectra and Knight shift measurements as a function of applied field orientation in the (001) basal plane of URu(2)Si(2). Observed linewidth oscillations confirm the in-plane twofold ordered domain state observed in recent magnetic susceptibility measurements. Analysis of our linewidth data leads to estimate ∼ 0.4% for the twofold intrinsic (monodomain) susceptibility anisotropy in the basal plane, a value ∼ 15 times smaller than that obtained from recent susceptibility measurements
Recommended from our members
NMR study of in-plane twofold ordering in URu(2)Si(2).
We report (29)Si NMR spectra and Knight shift measurements as a function of applied field orientation in the (001) basal plane of URu(2)Si(2). Observed linewidth oscillations confirm the in-plane twofold ordered domain state observed in recent magnetic susceptibility measurements. Analysis of our linewidth data leads to estimate ∼ 0.4% for the twofold intrinsic (monodomain) susceptibility anisotropy in the basal plane, a value ∼ 15 times smaller than that obtained from recent susceptibility measurements