The diamagnetism above the superconducting transition in underdoped
La(1.9)Sr(0.1)CuO(4) revisited: Chemical disorder or phase incoherent
superconductivity?
The interplay between superconducting fluctuations and inhomogeneities
presents a renewed interest due to recent works supporting an anomalous [beyond
the conventional Gaussian-Ginzburg-Landau (GGL) scenario] diamagnetism above Tc
in underdoped cuprates. This conclusion, mainly based in the observation of new
anomalies in the low-field isothermal magnetization curves, is in contradiction
with our earlier results in the underdoped La(1.9)Sr(0.1)CuO(4) [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 84, 3157 (2000)]. These seemingly intrinsic anomalies are being presented
in various influential works as a 'thermodynamic evidence' for phase incoherent
superconductivity in the pseudogap regime, this last being at present a central
and debated issue of the cuprate superconductors' physics. Here we have
extended our magnetization measurements in La(1.9)Sr(0.1)CuO(4) to two samples
with different chemical disorder, in one of them close to the one associated
with the random distribution of Sr ions. For this sample, the corresponding
Tc-distribution may be approximated as symmetric around the average Tc, while
in the most disordered sample is strongly asymmetric. The comparison between
the magnetization measured in both samples provides a crucial check of the
chemical disorder origin of the observed diamagnetism anomalies, which are
similar to those claimed as due to phase fluctuations by other authors. This
conclusion applies also to the sample affected only by the intrinsic-like
chemical disorder, providing then a further check that the intrinsic
diamagnetism above the superconducting transition of underdoped cuprates is not
affected by the opening of a pseudogap in the normal state. It is also shown
here that once these disorder effects are overcome, the remaining precursor
diamagnetism may be accounted at a quantitative level in terms of the GGL
approach under a total energy cutoff.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. Minor corrections include