A model of a strongly correlated electron liquid based on the fermion
condensation (FC) is extended to high-temperature superconductors. Within our
model, the appearance of FC presents a boundary separating the region of a
strongly interacting electron liquid from the region of a strongly correlated
electron liquid. We study the superconductivity of a strongly correlated liquid
and show that under certain conditions, the superconductivity vanishes at
temperatures T>Tc≃Tnode, with the superconducting gap being
smoothly transformed into a pseudogap. As the result, the pseudogap occupies
only a part of the Fermi surface. The gapped area shrinks with increasing the
temperature and vanishes at T=T∗. The single-particle excitation width is
also studied. The quasiparticle dispersion in systems with FC can be
represented by two straight lines characterized by the respective effective
masses MFC∗ and ML∗, and intersecting near the binding energy that is
of the order of the superconducting gap. It is argued that this strong change
of the quasiparticle dispersion at the binding can be enhanced in underdoped
samples because of strengthening the FC influence. The FC phase transition in
the presence of the superconductivity is examined, and it is shown that this
phase transition can be considered as kinetic energy driven.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, minor grammatical changes, revised and accepted
by JET