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Oxygen Isotope Effect Study of (Y, Pr)Ba<sub>2</sub>Cu<sub>3</sub>O<sub>7-δ</sub> Thin Films

ORAL

Abstract

For cuprate superconductors, oxygen isotope effect (OIE) has been used to probe the extent of electron-phonon interactions in the pairing mechanism [1] and in the pseudogap formation [2]. In this talk, we present a new OIE study of Pr-doped YBa2Cu3O7-δ (YPBCO), which is the only member of the RBCO (= rare earth) family where the superconductivity can be suppressed by doping without changing the oxygen content. To maximize doping and isotope homogeneity, epitaxial YPBCO thin films grown by pulsed laser deposition are used. The substitution of 16O by 18O is done by gas-phase diffusion and confirmed using Raman spectroscopy. Electrical transport measurements are then used to determine both the superconducting critical temperature Tc and the pseudogap onset temperature T*, to look for correlations between the isotope shifts of Tc and of T*. Our results are discussed in light of past and recent studies of the pseudogap [2, 3], and in connection with the charge order that is ubiquitouly seen in underdoped cuprates [4].

[1] G. Zhao et. al., PRB 51 16487(R) (1995)

[2] D. Temperano etl., PRL 84 1990 (1999)

[3] L. Zhao et. al., Nat. Phys. 13 250 (2017)

[4] R. Comin et. al., Annu. Rev. Con. Mat. Phys. 7 369 (2016)

Presenters

  • John Y Wei

    University of Toronto, Univ of Toronto

Authors

  • Chao C Zhang

    University of Toronto, Univ of Toronto

  • Min Gu Kang

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI

  • Jiarui Li

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI

  • Armond Khodagulyan

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Benjamin A Saack-LaVelle

    California State University, Los Angeles

  • Oscar O Bernal

    California State University, Los Angeles

  • Riccardo Comin

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • John Y Wei

    University of Toronto, Univ of Toronto