APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session Z2: Pseudogap in High Tc Cuprates
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Friday, March 25, 2011
Room: Ballroom A2
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Martin Greven, University of Minnesota
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.Z2.4
Abstract: Z2.00004 : Disentangling Cooper-pair formation above {$T_{c}$} from the pseudogap state in the cuprates
1:03 PM–1:39 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Takeshi Kondo
(Ames Laboratory, Iowa State University)
The discovery of the pseudogap in the cuprates created
significant excitement
amongst physicists as it was believed to be a signature of
pairing, in some cases
well above room temperature. This was supported by a number of
experiments
detecting phase-fluctuating superconductivity above {$T_{c}$}.
However, several
recent experiments reported that the pseudogap and
superconducting state are
characterized by different energy scales, and likely compete with
each other, leaving
open the question of whether the pseudogap is caused by pair
formation.
To address this issue, we investigate the spectral weights, which
are easier to
quantify and in many cases interpret than the spectral feature,
which is traditionally
used. A key such measure is the density of states at the
Fermi energy $D(E_{F})$. In conventional, clean superconductors this
weight is zero below $T_{c}$, but can be finite if there are
strong impurity
scattering effects. In such cases $D(E_{F})$ reflects the pair
breaking states.
A separate scenario is a generic ``density wave state" in the
absence of pairing,
which leads to a decrease of the $D(E_{F})$ due to the opening of
the density wave
gap. In addition there is also the possibility of the coexistence
of superconductivity
and the density wave state - inhomogeneous superconductors such
as the cuprates,
where superconducting and non-superconducting patches coexist in
the sample.
One can then expect that the temperature dependence of $D(E_{F})$
can be used to
distinguish between these scenarios and disentangle the
electronic ground states of
the cuprates.
Since the spectral gap in the cuprates displays significant
momentum dependence,
in our study we use the intensity of the spectral function at
$E_{F}$, $I(E_{F}, k)$,
which when integrated over all momenta equals $D(E_{F})$.
This allows us to isolate the behavior at a specific $k$-point
and avoid smearing
due to averaging.
In this talk, we report the discovery of a spectroscopic
signature of pair formation
and demonstrate that in a region commonly referred to as the
``pseudogap", two
distinct states coexist: one that persists to an intermediate
temperature {$T_{pair}$}
and a second that extends up to { $T^{*}$}.
The first state is characterized by doping independent scaling
behavior and is due to
pairing above {$T_{c}$}, but significantly below {$T^{*}$}.
The second state is the ``proper" pseudogap - characterized by
the loss of low
energy spectral weight, anomalies in transport properties and the
absence of pair
formation. {$T_{pair}$} has a universal value around 120-150K
even for materials
with very different {$T_{c}$} and it likely sets limit on the
highest attainable
{$T_{c}$} in the cuprates.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.Z2.4