588 research outputs found
Two mechanisms of pseudogap formation in Bi-2201: Evidence from the c-axis magnetoresistance
Measurements of the c-axis resistivity and magnetoresistance have been used
to investigate the pseudogap (PG) behavior in Bi_{2+z}Sr_{2-x-z}La_xCuO_y
(Bi-2201) crystals at various hole densities. While the PG opening temperature
T* increases with decreasing hole doping, the magnetic-field sensitivity of the
PG is found to have a very different trend: it appears at lower temperatures in
more underdoped samples and vanishes in non-superconducting samples. These data
suggest that besides the field-insensitive pseudogap emerging at T*, a distinct
one is formed above T_c as a precursor to superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Europhysics Letters
(initially submitted to PRL on 14 June 2000
Crossover from a pseudogap state to a superconducting state
On the basis of our calculation we deduce that the particular electronic
structure of cuprate superconductors confines Cooper pairs to be firstly formed
in the antinodal region which is far from the Fermi surface, and these pairs
are incoherent and result in the pseudogap state. With the change of doping or
temperature, some pairs are formed in the nodal region which locates the Fermi
surface, and these pairs are coherent and lead to superconductivity. Thus the
coexistence of the pseudogap and the superconducting gap is explained when the
two kinds of gaps are not all on the Fermi surface. It is also shown that the
symmetry of the pseudogap and the superconducting gap are determined by the
electronic structure, and non-s wave symmetry gap favors the high-temperature
superconductivity. Why the high-temperature superconductivity occurs in the
metal region near the Mott metal-insulator transition is also explained.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Electron-boson spectral density of LiFeAs obtained from optical data
We analyze existing optical data in the superconducting state of LiFeAs at 4 K, to recover its electron-boson spectral density. A maximum entropy
technique is employed to extract the spectral density from
the optical scattering rate. Care is taken to properly account for elastic
impurity scattering which can importantly affect the optics in an -wave
superconductor, but does not eliminate the boson structure. We find a robust
peak in centered about 8.0 meV or 5.3 (with 17.6 K). Its position in energy agrees well with a similar
structure seen in scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS). There is also a peak
in the inelastic neutron scattering (INS) data at this same energy. This peak
is found to persist in the normal state at 23 K. There is evidence that
the superconducting gap is anisotropic as was also found in low temperature
angular resolved photoemission (ARPES) data.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
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