Session D9: Superconductivity: Charge Order and Inhomogeneity

2:30 PM–5:30 PM, Monday, March 5, 2007
Colorado Convention Center Room: Korbel 1D

Sponsoring Unit: DMP
Chair: Steve Kivelson, Stanford University

Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.D9.10

Abstract: D9.00010 : Fluctuating Cu-O-Cu Bond model of high temperature superconductivity in cuprates

4:18 PM–4:30 PM

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Authors:

  D.M. Newns
  C.C. Tsuei
    (IBM T.J. Watson Research Center)

Twenty years of research have yet to produce a consensus on the origin of high temperature superconductivity (HTS). However, several generic characteristics of cuprate superconductors have emerged as the essential ingredients of and/or constraints on any viable microscopic model of HTS. Besides a $T_{c}$ of order $100$ K, they include a $d$-wave superconducting (SC) gap with Fermi liquid nodal excitations, a pseudogap with $d$-symmetry and the characteristic temperature scale $T^{\ast}$, an anomalous doping-dependent oxygen isotope shift, nanometer-scale gap inhomogeneity, etc.. The isotope shift implies a key role for oxygen vibrations, but conventional BCS single-phonon coupling is essentially forbidden by symmetry and by the on-site Coulomb interaction $U$. Hence the present work invokes nonlinear coupling of planar oxygen vibrations to the Cu-Cu hopping integral $t$. A dominant Fluctuating Bond field emerges involving oxygen vibrational square amplitudes - and associated Cu-Cu $t$'s - in a pattern of quadrupolar symmetry around a given Cu site. Such fluctuations in Cu-Cu bonds mediate $d$-wave pairing, leading to a $d$-wave SC gap, and an explanation of the anomalous isotope shift. A quadrupolar CDW generates a $d$-wave pseudogap related to $T^{\ast}$. Other salient features of HTS are also explained by our model. This work is to appear in Nature Physics.

To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.D9.10