A theory of Kondo lattices is developed for the t-J model on a square
lattice. The spin susceptibility is described in a form consistent with a
physical picture of Kondo lattices: Local spin fluctuations at different sites
interact with each other by a bare intersite exchange interaction, which is
mainly composed of two terms such as the superexchange interaction, which
arises from the virtual exchange of spin-channel pair excitations of electrons
across the Mott-Hubbard gap, and an exchange interaction arising from that of
Gutzwiller's quasi-particles. The bare exchange interaction is enhanced by
intersite spin fluctuations developed because of itself. The enhanced exchange
interaction is responsible for the development of superconducting fluctuations
as well as the Cooper pairing between Gutzwiller's quasi-particles. On the
basis of the microscopic theory, we develop a phenomenological theory of
low-temperature superconductivity and pseudo-gaps in the under-doped region as
well as high-temperature superconductivity in the optimal-doped region.
Anisotropic pseudo-gaps open mainly because of d\gamma-wave superconducting
low-energy fluctuations: Quasi-particle spectra around (\pm\pi/a,0) and
(0,\pm\pi/a), with a the lattice constant, or X points at the chemical
potential are swept away by strong inelastic scatterings, and quasi-particles
are well defined only around (\pm\pi/2a,\pm\pi/2a) on the Fermi surface or
line. As temperatures decrease in the vicinity of superconducting critical
temperatures, pseudo-gaps become smaller and the well-defined region is
extending toward X points. The condensation of d\gamma-wave Cooper pairs
eventually occurs at low enough temperatures when the pair breaking by
inelastic scatterings becomes small enough.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figure