Abstract

A Hartree approximation is used to study the interplay of two kinds of scaling which arise in high-temperature superconductors, namely critical-point scaling and that due to the confinement of electron pairs to their lowest Landau level in the presence of an applied magnetic field. In the neighbourhood of the zero-field critical point, thermodynamic functions scale with the scaling variable (T−Tc2(B))/B1/2ν(T-T_{c2}(B))/B^{1/2\nu}, which differs from the variable (T−Tc(0))/B1/2ν(T - T_c(0))/B^{1/2\nu} suggested by the gaussian approximation. Lowest-Landau-level (LLL) scaling occurs in a region of high field surrounding the upper critical field line but not in the vicinity of the zero-field transition. For YBaCuO in particular, a field of at least 10 T is needed to observe LLL scaling. These results are consistent with a range of recent experimental measurements of the magnetization, transport properties and, especially, the specific heat of high-TcT_c materials.Comment: 22 pages + 1 figure appended as postscript fil

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