Local electronic structure of highly doped cuprate superconductors
ORAL
Abstract
Superconductivity in the unconventional, high-Tc cuprate superconductors emerges with sufficient hole-doping of the parent antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state. Upon further doping the superconductivity is eventually suppressed before fully breaking down. In this overdoped regime the superconducting state is thought to emerge from a more conventional Fermi liquid. The suppression of superconductivity would then follow a more BCS-like picture, with gap closure due to a vanishing pairing interaction. Here, we map the electronic structure and the superconducting gap of the single layer cuprate (Pb,Bi)2Sr2CuO6+x using Spectroscoping Imaging Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and show how they evolve as Tc approaches zero in the overdoped regime. We find a highly heterogeneous electronic structure, with spectra with a gap and without a gap coexisting in close proximity at sufficiently high doping. Despite this strong inhomogeneity we still find a QPI signal consistent with full hole-like Fermi surfaces well-matched with ARPES results on the same samples. In this talk, I will discuss the implications of our data for the overdoped cuprates.
–
Presenters
-
Willem Tromp
Leiden University
Authors
-
Willem Tromp
Leiden University
-
Irene Battisti
Leiden University
-
Koen Bastiaans
Leiden University
-
Damianos Chatzopoulos
Leiden University
-
Steef Smit
University of Amsterdam
-
Yingkai Huang
Van der Waals-Zeeman Instituute, University of Amsterdam, University of Amsterdam, van der Waals Zeeman Institute, University of Amsterdam
-
Erik Van Heumen
University of Amsterdam
-
Mark Golden
University of Amsterdam
-
Milan Allan
Leiden University, Leiden Institute of Physics, Leiden University