Polaronic features similar to those previously observed in the photoinduced
spectra of cuprates have been detected in the reflectivity spectra of
chemically doped parent compounds of high-critical-temperature superconductors,
both n-type and p-type. In Nd2CuO4−y these features, whose
intensities depend both on doping and temperature, include local vibrational
modes in the far infrared and a broad band centered at ∼ 1000 cm−1.
The latter band is produced by the overtones of two (or three) local modes and
is well described in terms of a small-polaron model, with a binding energy of
about 500 cm−1. Most of the above infrared features are shown to survive
in the metallic phase of Nd2−xCexCu04−y, Bi2Sr2CuO6, and
YBa2Cu3O7−y, where they appear as extra-Drude peaks. The occurrence
of polarons is attributed to local modes strongly coupled to carriers, as shown
by a comparison with tunneling results.Comment: File latex, 31 p., submitted to Physical Review B. Figures may be
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