Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session C08: Superconductivity: Copper Oxide - Pseudogap
2:30 PM–5:18 PM,
Monday, March 4, 2019
BCEC
Room: 150
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP DCMP
Chair: Pengcheng Dai, Rice University
Abstract: C08.00008 : Large negative thermal Hall response in the pseudogap phase of cuprates
3:54 PM–4:06 PM
Presenter:
Gael Grissonnanche
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Authors:
Gael Grissonnanche
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Anaelle Legros
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Sven Badoux
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Étienne Lefrancois
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Victor Zatko
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Maude le Lizaire
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Francis Laliberte
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Adrien Gourgout
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Jianshi Zhou
(University of Texas (Austin, USA))
Sunseng Pyon
(University of Tokyo (Japan))
Tomohiro Takayama
(University of Tokyo (Japan))
Hidenori Takagi
(University of Tokyo (Japan))
Shimpei Ono
(Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry (Japan))
Nicolas Doiron-Leyraud
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
Louis Taillefer
(Universite de Sherbrooke (Canada))
The thermal Hall conductivity κxy has recently emerged as a powerful probe of insulators with unusual forms of magnetism, such as quantum spin liquids [3] and quantum spin ice [4].
We report extensive measurements of the thermal Hall conductivity κxy in several families of cuprates across a wide range of dopings. We observe a large and negative thermal Hall response at temperatures below the pseudogap temperature T*, which appears immediately below the pseudogap critical doping p*. The negative κxy contrasts with the positive electrical Hall conductivity σxy and, moreover, the magnitude of κxy increases as doping is reduced towards p = 0, whereas σxy vanishes as the material becomes an insulator.
The negative κxy is therefore due to neutral heat carriers and it points to spin chirality [5], or perhaps topological excitations.
[1] Proust & Taillefer, ARCMP; arXiv:1804.08502 (2018).
[2] Scheurer et al., PNAS (2018).
[3] Kasahara et al., Nature (2018).
[4] Hirschberger et al., Science (2015).
[5] Lee et al., PRB (2015).
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