Mechanism of Electron Pairing in Copper-Oxide High Temperature Superconductors
ORAL
Abstract
The CuO2 plane supporting high temperature superconductivity in the cuprates typically occurs at the base of a periodic array of edge-sharing CuO5 pyramids. In the undoped material, an antiferromagnetic insulator state is stabilized by hopping of electrons between neighboring Cu and O atoms at rate t/? and across the charge transfer energy gap E, generating ‘superexchange’ interactions of energy J ≈ (4t4)⁄E3. However, hole doping this CuO2 plane produces a very high temperature superconducting state whose electron-pairing is exceptional. A proposed explanation for the electron-pairing is that hole doping destroys magnetic order, but preserves the pair-forming superexchange interactions which are determined by the charge transfer energy scale E. Combining single-electron and electron-pair (Josephson) scanning tunneling microscopy, we can explore this hypothesis directly by atomic-scale visualization of both nP and E in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x . Determining the responses of E and nP to changes in the distance δ between the planar Cu and apical O reveals the response of the electron-pair condensate to controlled variations in the charge-transfer energy. Strong quantitative agreement between these observations and predictions from strong-correlation theory of hole-doped charge-transfer insulators indicates that charge-transfer superexchange is the electron-pairing mechanism of superconductive Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x.
Inst. of Advanced Industrial Science and Tech., Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8568, Japan., National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Electronics and Photonics Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan, AIST, Inst. of Advanced Industrial Science and Tech., AIST, Tsukuba, Japan
Shin-ichi Uchida
University of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo
Mohammad Hamidian
Cornell University
Seamus S Davis
University of Oxford, University College Cork, Cornell University, Grad. Centre for Quantum Materials at Max Planck Institute, University of Oxford, University College Cork, University of Oxford, University College Cork