Charge ordering in NaCCOC
In studying high temperature superconductors, what can be explained by a textbook Fermi liquid theory and what cannot be is a central question. To answer this central question is generally easier said than done, because an exotic theory can look like a textbook theory when low energy excitations are examined. So, the correct question to ask is whether the exotic strong correlation physics is first or the textbook Fermi liquid physics is first.
In addressing this question, the so-called Na-oxychloride superconductors (NaCCOC) are valuable for technical reasons. Here in this work, we studied the rare high quality crystals of NaCCOC at UCSC. The UCSC data taken at the SSRL definitely indicate that the exotic strong correlation physics is the primary physics to be considered first. This conclusion is drawn by carefully studying the Fermi surface geometry and correlating it with the known charge ordering wave vectors for NaCCOC.
Extension to other cuprates
We were able to extend our analysis to Bi2212 superconductors, for which we obtained the data at the SSRL, and Bi2201 superconductors. In both cases, we were able to draw the same conclusion as above.
Relation to the study of the strange metal phase
Our studies of the strange metal phase (sECFL, pECFL, nMBDOS) show that the extreme electron correlation is important. The study of charge order here agrees on that. However, this study is related to the so-called pseudo-gap phase, not the strange metal phase. Of course, the eventual theory of superconductivity should address all phases: the strange normal phase, the pseudo-gap phase, and the superconducting phase.
Links, Students
The paper can be accessed from here (PRB, Rapid Communications) or here (public access).
This work was presented as part of my invited talk at the APS March Meeting 2012: abstract and presentation.
- Jianqiao Meng (postdoc; former) took over this project, when he joined the group. Matt Brunner (grad student; former) helped with some of the experiments.
