ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The transition mechanism in high temperature cuprate superconductors is an outstanding puzzle. A previous suggestion on the role of non-linear local lattice instability modes on the microscopic pairing mechanism in high temperature cuprate superconductors cite{Lee:JSNM09} is re-examined to provide a viable mechanism for superconductivity in these cuprates via an unusual lattice vibration in which an electron is predominantly interacting with a nonlinear $Q_2$ mode of the oxygen clusters in the CuO$_2$ planes. It is shown that the interaction has explicit d-wave symmetry and leads to an indirect coupling of d-wave symmetry between electrons. As a follow-up of cite{Lee:JSNM09}, in this paper, we report detailed derivation of the superconducting gap equation and numerical solutions for the transition temperature as inherently integrated into the so-called Extended Hubbard Model (EHM). A unique feature in the EHM is that the transition temperature has an inherent k-dependence. In addition, superconducting gap solutions are restrained to specific regions in the first Brillouin zone (1BZ). It is very feasible to expect that the EHM naturally inherits a huge parameter space in which experimentally measured results, such as the well-known superconducting dome and the phase diagram from electronic Raman scattering cite{Sacuto:RPP13} can be accommodated. The EHM model hence offers a viable venue to search for or confirm any signature in k-point-sensitive experimental measurements.
The discovery of high temperature superconductivity in the cuprates in 1986 triggered a spectacular outpouring of creative and innovative scientific inquiry. Much has been learned over the ensuing 28 years about the novel forms of quantum matter that
We present a comparative study of magnetic excitations in the first two Ruddlesden-Popper members of the Hg-family of high-temperature superconducting cuprates, which are chemically nearly identical and have the highest critical temperature ($T_mathr
In the Eliashberg integral equations for d-wave superconductivity, two different functions $(alpha^2 F)_n(omega, theta)$ and $(alpha^2 F)_{p,d}(omega)$ determine, respectively, the normal and the pairing self-energies. We present a quantitative analy
Recent experiments in the cuprates have seen evidence of a transient superconducting state upon optical excitation polarized along the c-axis [R. Mankowsky et al., Nature 516, 71 (2014)]. Motivated by these experiments we propose an extension of the
Besides superconductivity, copper-oxide high temperature superconductors are susceptible to other types of ordering. We use scanning tunneling microscopy and resonant elastic x-ray scattering measurements to establish the formation of charge ordering