90 research outputs found
Unusual electronic ground state of a prototype cuprate: band splitting of single CuO_2-plane Bi_2 Sr_(2-x) La_x CuO_(6+delta)
By in-situ change of polarization a small splitting of the Zhang-Rice singlet
state band near the Fermi level has been resolved for optimum doped (x=0.4)
BiSrLaCuO at the (pi,0)-point (R.Manzke et al.
PRB 63, R100504 (2001). Here we treat the momentum dependence and lineshape of
the split band by photoemission in the EDC-mode with very high angular and
energy resolution. The splitting into two destinct emissions could also be
observed over a large portion of the major symmetry line M, giving the
dispersion for the individual contributions. Since bi-layer effects can not be
present in this single-layer material the results have to be discussed in the
context of one-particle removal spectral functions derived from current
theoretical models. The most prominent are microscopic phase separation
including striped phase formation, coexisting antiferromagnetic and
incommensurate charge-density-wave critical fluctuations coupled to electrons
(hot spots) or even spin charge separation within the Luttinger liquid picture,
all leading to non-Fermi liquid like behavior in the normal state and having
severe consequences on the way the superconducting state forms. Especially the
possibilty of observing spinon and holon excitations is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Spectroscopic signatures of a bandwidth-controlled Mott transition at the surface of 1T-TaSe
High-resolution angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES) data show that a
metal-insulator Mott transition occurs at the surface of the quasi-two
dimensional compound TaSe. The transition is driven by the narrowing of the
Ta band induced by a temperature-dependent modulation of the atomic
positions. A dynamical mean-field theory calculation of the spectral function
of the half-filled Hubbard model captures the main qualitative feature of the
data, namely the rapid transfer of spectral weight from the observed
quasiparticle peak at the Fermi surface to the Hubbard bands, as the
correlation gap opens up.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; one modified figure, added referenc
Superconducting gap in the presence of bilayer splitting in underdoped Bi(Pb)2212
The clearly resolved bilayer splitting in ARPES spectra of the underdoped
Pb-Bi2212 compound rises the question of how the bonding and antibonding sheets
of the Fermi surface are gapped in the superconducting state. Here we compare
the superconducting gaps for both split components and show that within the
experimental uncertainties they are identical. By tuning the relative intensity
of the bonding and antibonding bands using different excitation conditions we
determine the precise {\bf k}-dependence of the leading edge gap. Significant
deviations from the simple cos()-cos() gap function for the
studied doping level are detected.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures (revtex4
Developments in the negative-U modelling of the cuprate HTSC systems
The paper deals with the many stands that go into creating the unique and
complex nature of the HTSC cuprates above Tc as below. Like its predecessors it
treats charge, not spin or lattice, as prime mover, but thus taken in the
context of the chemical bonding relevant to these copper oxides. The crucial
shell filling, negative-U, double-loading fluctuations possible there require
accessing at high valent local environment as prevails within the mixed valent,
inhomogeneous two sub-system circumstance of the HTSC materials. Close
attention is paid to the recent results from Corson, Demsar, Li, Johnson,
Norman, Varma, Gyorffy and colleagues.Comment: 44 pages:200+ references. Submitted to J.Phys.:Condensed Matter, Sept
7 200
The pseudogap in high-temperature superconductors: an experimental survey
We present an experimental review of the nature of the pseudogap in the
cuprate superconductors. Evidence from various experimental techniques points
to a common phenomenology. The pseudogap is seen in all high temperature
superconductors and there is general agreement on the temperature and doping
range where it exists. It is also becoming clear that the superconducting gap
emerges from the normal state pseudogap. The d-wave nature of the order
parameter holds for both the superconducting gap and the pseudogap. Although an
extensive body of evidence is reviewed, a consensus on the origin of the
pseudogap is as lacking as it is for the mechanism underlying high temperature
superconductivity.Comment: review article, 54 pages, 50 figure
Acceleration of tissue phase mapping with sensitivity encoding at 3T
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of sensitivity encoding on the quantitative assessment of cardiac motion in black blood cine tissue phase mapping (TPM) sequences. Up to now whole volume coverage of the heart is still limited by the long acquisition times. Therefore, a significant increase in imaging speed without deterioration of quantitative motion information is indispensable.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>20 volunteers were enrolled in this study. Each volunteer underwent myocardial short-axis TPM scans with different SENSE acceleration factors. The influence of SENSE acceleration on the measured motion curves was investigated.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>It is demonstrated that all TPM sequences with SENSE acceleration have only minimum influence on the motion curves. Even with a SENSE factor of four, the decrease in the amplitude of the motion curve was less than 3%. No significant difference was observed for the global correlation coefficient and deviation between the motion curves obtained by the reproducibility and the SENSE accelerated measurements.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>It is feasible to accelerate myocardial TPM measurements with SENSE factors up to 4 without losing substantial information of the motion pattern.</p
Transient four-wave mixing in T-shaped GaAs quantum wires
The binding energy of excitons and biexcitons and the exciton dephasing in T-shaped GaAs quantum wires is investigated by transient four-wave mixing. The T-shaped structure is fabricated by cleaved-edge overgrowth, and its geometry is engineered to optimize the one-dimensional confinement. In this wire of 6.6×24 nm2 size, we find a one-dimensional confinement of more than 20 meV, an inhomogeneous broadening of 3.4 meV, an exciton binding energy of 12 meV, and a biexciton binding energy of 2.0 meV. A dispersion of the homogeneous linewidth within the inhomogeneous broadening due to phonon-assisted relaxation is observed. The exciton acoustic-phonon-scattering coefficient of 6.1±0.5 μeV/K is larger than in comparable quantum-well structures
- …