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We have measured the near-normal reflectance of Tl2Ba2CaCu2O8 (Tl2212) for energies from 0.1 to 4.0 eV at room temperature and used a Kramers-Kronig analysis to find the complex, frequency dependent dielectric function, from which the optical conductivity was determined. Using Thermal-Difference-Reflectance (TDR) Spectroscopy the reflectance of the sample in the normal state just above the superconducting transition, and in the superconducting state were then obtained. From these data we determined the ratio of the superconducting- to normal-state optical conductivities. Mattis and Bardeen had calculated this function within the BCS theory, where the gap is a fixed energy-independent quantity. Taking into account the retarded nature of the electron-phonon coupling results in a complex, energy dependent gap causing deviations from the Mattis-Bardeen plot at energies where the phonon coupling function is large. We find a typical deviation near the phonon energies in Tl2212, and in addition, at 1.2 and 1.7eV. The phonon, and these electronic terms can each be described by a coupling constant. None of which by itself gives rise to a high transition temperature, but the combination does. Using Resonant Inelastic X-Ray Scattering (RIXS) we find that the d-to-d excitations of the cuprate ion in Tl2212 fall at the same energies as the dips in the Mattis-Bardeen plot. We conclude that the high superconducting transition temperature of the cuprates is due to the sum of the phonon interaction, and interactions with the Cu-ion d-shell.
Close to a zero temperature transition between ordered and disordered electronic phases, quantum fluctuations can lead to a strong enhancement of the electron mass and to the emergence of competing phases such as superconductivity. A correlation betw
Even after 25 years of research the pairing mechanism and - at least for electron doped compounds - also the order parameter symmetry of the high transition temperature (high-Tc) cuprate superconductors is still under debate. One of the reasons is th
The key ingredients in any superconductor are the Cooper pairs, in which two electrons combine to form a composite boson. In all conventional superconductors the pairing strength alone sets the majority of the physical properties including the superc
We report the discovery of a self-doped multi-layer high Tc superconductor Ba2Ca3Cu4O8F2(F0234) which contains distinctly different superconducting gap magnitudes along its two Fermi surface(FS) sheets. While formal valence counting would imply this
Theories based on the coupling between spin fluctuations and fermionic quasiparticles are among the leading contenders to explain the origin of high-temperature superconductivity, but estimates of the strength of this interaction differ widely. Here