58 research outputs found
LaBaCuO as a superconducting Rosetta Stone
The high-temperature superconductivity in layered cuprates discovered by
Bednorz and M\"uller arrived as a shock. Gradually, the presence of competing
orders, such as antiferromagnetism and charge order, were discovered; however,
the relationship to the superconductivity has been confusing. It so happens
that the original cuprate superconductor family LaBaCuO
contains all of the relevant phases, with extreme competition among them, and
analysis of these phases provides strong clues to the nature of the
superconductivity in cuprates.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted manuscrip
Indium substitution effect on the topological crystalline insulator family (PbSn)InTe: Topological and superconducting properties
Topological crystalline insulators (TCIs) have been of great interest in the
area of condensed matter physics. We investigated the effect of indium
substitution on the crystal structure and transport properties in the TCI
system (PbSn)InTe. For samples with a tin
concentration , the low-temperature resisitivities show a dramatic
variation as a function of indium concentration: with up to ~2% indium doping
the samples show weak-metallic behavior, similar to their parent compounds;
with ~6% indium doping, samples have true bulk-insulating resistivity and
present evidence for nontrivial topological surface states; with higher indium
doping levels, superconductivity was observed, with a transition temperature,
Tc, positively correlated to the indium concentration and reaching as high as
4.7 K. We address this issue from the view of bulk electronic structure
modified by the indium-induced impurity level that pins the Fermi level. The
current work summarizes the indium substitution effect on (Pb,Sn)Te, and
discusses the topological and superconducting aspects, which can be provide
guidance for future studies on this and related systems.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Charge Correlations in Cuprate Superconductors
High-temperature superconductivity, with transition temperatures up to ≈134 K at ambient pressure, occurs in layered cuprate compounds. The conducting CuO2 planes, which are universally present, are responsible for the superconductivity but also show a disposition to other competing states including spin and charge order. Charge-density-wave (CDW) order appears to be a universal property of cuprate superconductors. It has been studied via a multitude of probes including X-ray and neutron scattering, nuclear magnetic resonance, scanning probe techniques, electronic transport, and quantum oscillations. Here, we review the microscopic properties of the CDW order. We discuss the nature of the ordered state, that is, its symmetry and microscopic structure. Furthermore, we show how the CDW order is related to quenched disorder, host structure, symmetry breaking perturbations, and magnetic fields. We also describe measurements of dynamic collective charge excitations that are closely related to the quasi-static CDW order. Finally, we highlight some of the debated issues in the field, including the origin of the CDW order, the relationship to spin order, and the nature of the spatial CDW correlations. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics, Volume 15 is March 2024. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates
Stripes and Superconductivity in Cuprates
Holes doped into the CuO2 planes of cuprate parent compounds frustrate the
antiferromagnetic order. The development of spin and charge stripes provides a
compromise between the competing magnetic and kinetic energies. Static stripe
order has been observed only in certain particular compounds, but there are
signatures which suggest that dynamic stripe correlations are common in the
cuprates. Though stripe order is bad for superconducting phase coherence,
stripes are compatible with strong pairing. Ironically, magnetic-field-induced
stripe order appears to enhance the stability of superconducting order within
the planes.Comment: 6 pages, submitted to proceedings of ECRYS-201
- …