14 research outputs found
Phase-fluctuation induced reduction of the kinetic energy at the superconducting transition
Recent reflectivity measurements provide evidence for a "violation" of the
in-plane optical integral in the underdoped high-T_c compound
Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta} up to frequencies much higher than expected by
standard BCS theory. The sum rule violation may be related to a loss of
in-plane kinetic energy at the superconducting transition. Here, we show that a
model based on phase fluctuations of the superconducting order parameter can
account for this change of in-plane kinetic energy at T_c. The change is due to
a transition from a phase-incoherent Cooper-pair motion in the pseudogap regime
above T_c to a phase-coherent motion at T_c.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps-figure
Role of spinon and spinon singlet pair excitations on phase transitions in superconductors
We examine the roles of massless Dirac spinon and spin singlet pair
excitations on the phase transition in superconductors. Although the
massless spinon excitations in the presence of the spin singlet pair
excitations do not alter the nature of the phase transition at , that
is, the XY universality class, they are seen to induce an additional attractive
interaction potential between vortices, further stabilizing vortex-antivortex
pairs at low temperature for lightly doped high samples.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
QED3 theory of underdoped high temperature superconductors
Low-energy theory of d-wave quasiparticles coupled to fluctuating vortex
loops that describes the loss of phase coherence in a two dimensional d-wave
superconductor at T=0 is derived. The theory has the form of 2+1 dimensional
quantum electrodynamics (QED3), and is proposed as an effective description of
the T=0 superconductor-insulator transition in underdoped cuprates. The
coupling constant ("charge") in this theory is proportional to the dual order
parameter of the XY model, which is assumed to be describing the quantum
fluctuations of the phase of the superconducting order parameter. The principal
result is that the destruction of phase coherence in d-wave superconductors
typically, and immediately, leads to antiferromagnetism. The transition can be
understood in terms of the spontaneous breaking of an approximate "chiral"
SU(2) symmetry, which may be discerned at low enough energies in the standard
d-wave superconductor. The mechanism of the symmetry breaking is analogous to
the dynamical mass generation in the QED3, with the "mass" here being
proportional to staggered magnetization. Other insulating phases that break
chiral symmetry include the translationally invariant "d+ip" and "d+is"
insulators, and various one dimensional charge-density and spin-density waves.
The theory offers an explanation for the rounded d-wave-like dispersion seen in
ARPES experiments on Ca2CuO2Cl2 (F. Ronning et. al., Science 282, 2067 (1998)).Comment: Revtex, 20 pages, 5 figures; this is a much extended follow-up to the
Phys. Rev. Lett. vol.88, 047006 (2002) (cond-mat/0110188); improved
presentation, many additional explanations, comments, and references added,
sec. IV rewritten. Final version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Optical Sum Rule in Finite Bands
In a single finite electronic band the total optical spectral weight or
optical sum carries information on the interactions involved between the charge
carriers as well as on their band structure. It varies with temperature as well
as with impurity scattering. The single band optical sum also bears some
relationship to the charge carrier kinetic energy and, thus, can potentially
provide useful information, particularly on its change as the charge carriers
go from normal to superconducting state. Here we review the considerable
advances that have recently been made in the context of high oxides, both
theoretical and experimental.Comment: Review article accepted for publication in J. Low Temp. Phys. 29
pages, 33 figure