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Visualization of Intra-Unit-Cell Orbital Ordering in Bi<sub>2</sub>Sr<sub>2</sub>CaCu<sub>2</sub>O<sub>8+</sub>

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

The CuO2 unit cell is the essential element of superconductivity in cuprate. The Coulombic interactions dominating the 3d9 and 3d10 configurations of each copper ion have been the focus of virally all theoretical investigations. However, if Coulombic interactions exist between the electrons of the 2p6 orbitals of each planar oxygen atom, the energy degeneracy may be lifted due to orbital ordering. The consequence would be symmetry breaking inside the CuO2 unit cell and an electronic nematic phase in which the charge transfer energy ε separating each oxygen 2p6 orbital from the relevant copper 3d10 orbital configuration is different for the two oxygen atoms. We developed sublattice resolved imaging of charge transfer energy ε(r) to CuO2 and successfully detected powerful rotational symmetry breaking of ε(r) inside the unit cell. In fact the energy splitting between the two oxygen atoms on the energy scale of circa 50 meV. Hence a powerful orbitally ordered state occurs in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 at the charge-transfer energy scale. We show that, spatially, this state is arranged in Ising domains that are pinned by the dense dispersal of dopant-ions which render the material superconducting. These data pinpoint the microscopic mechanism for the cuprate nematicity as due to orbital ordering. And such orbital ordering bears striking analogies to the iron dzx and dzy orbitals (orbital ordering) well known in iron-based superconductors.

Publication: Detection of Orbital Ordering in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x, under review.

Presenters

  • Shuqiu Wang

    University of Oxford

Authors

  • Shuqiu Wang

    University of Oxford

  • Niall Kennedy

    University of Oxford, University College Cork, Univ Coll Cork

  • Kazuhiro Fujita

    Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Shin-ichi Uchida

    University of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo

  • Hiroshi Eisaki

    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

  • Peter D Johnson

    Brookhaven National Laboratory, University of Oxford, Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Shane O'Mahony

    University College Cork

  • 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