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Evidence of a Pair Density Wave Statein the Cuprate Pseudogap Phase

ORAL

Abstract

In cuprate superconductors a mysterious quantum fluid designated as the pseudogap is produced by electron-density depletion in the CuO2 antiferromagnetic insulator. This phase appears to be the parent state to the highest temperature ambient superconductors but its nature remains unidentified. The possibility that the pseudogap of cuprates is a pair density wave (PDW) state, in which the density of electron pairs modulates spatially, has come into sharp and intense research focus. By studying strongly underdoped Bi2Sr2CaDyCu2O8 in the superconductive phase, we detect the 8a0-periodic  modulations in real-space signifying a PDW coexisting with superconductivity. We develop a new theory for the quasiparticle interference signature (QPI) that provides a 'fingerprint' Λ(q) specifically for an 8a0-periodic PDW. By visualizing the evolution with temperature of the electronic structure from the superconducting into the pseudogap phase, we find the temperature dependence of the QPI signature Λ(q) that is predicted for the PDW. These observations are consistent with theory for the transition from a PDW state coexisting with d-wave superconductivity to a pure PDW state in the Bi2Sr2CaDyCu2O8 pseudogap phase. 

Publication: Wang, S., Choubey, P., Chong, Y.X. et al. Scattering interference signature of a pair density wave state in the cuprate pseudogap phase. Nature Communications, 12, 6087 (2021).

Presenters

  • Shuqiu Wang

    University of Oxford

Authors

  • Shuqiu Wang

    University of Oxford

  • Peayush K Choubey

    Ruhr Univ Bochum

  • Yi Xue Chong

    Cornell University

  • Weijiong Chen

    University of Oxford

  • Wangping Ren

    University of Oxford

  • H Eisaki

    5. Inst. of Advanced Industrial Science and Tech., Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8568, Japan, lectronics and Photonics Research Institute,10National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science11and Technology, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8568, Japan, Inst. of Advanced Industrial Science and Tech, Japan

  • Shin-ichi Uchida

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Peter J Hirschfeld

    University of Florida, Department of Physics, University of Florida

  • JC S Davis

    University of Oxford, University College Cork, University of Oxford; Cornell University; University College Cork; Max-Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids, University of Oxford