53 research outputs found

    Intrinsic tunneling or Joule heating?

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    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

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    High magnetic field studies of cuprate superconductors revealed a non-BCS temperature dependence of the upper critical field Hc2(T)H_{c2}(T) 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} TcT_{c}. Here we present both ρab(B)\rho_{ab}(B) and ρc(B)\rho_{c}(B) of tiny Bi2212 crystals in magnetic fields up to 50 Tesla. None of our measurements revealed a situation when on the field increase ρc\rho_c reaches its maximum while ρab\rho_{ab} remains very small if not zero. The resistive %upper critical fields estimated from the in-plane and out-of-plane Hc2(T)H_{c2}(T) estimated from ρab(B)\rho_{ab}(B) and ρc(B)\rho_{c}(B) 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-TcT_{c} 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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