Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1518907 Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids 2006 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

A generalization of the nearly antiferromagnetic Fermi liquid (NAFL) model is introduced by splitting the (inverse) Stoner factor S=1-χqU into a kinetic part χq, which depends on the band structure and can be calculated explicitly, and an interaction part U which is independent of the band structure but can have a weak doping dependence. Given U(x), fluctuations can be included via a mode-coupling calculation, to satisfy the Mermin–Wagner theorem.For cuprates, the doping dependence of the susceptibility χq leads to a number of predictions. The antiferromagnetic (AF) phase is closely coupled to hot spot physics, and there is a quantum phase transition (QPT) where magnetic order terminates, close to the point when hot spots cease to exist. This QPT is roughly symmetric for electron and hole doping. In a two-dimensional system, long-range AF order is present only at T=0, and is signalled by a diverging correlation length ξ. Due to the anisotropy of the cuprate band structure t′/t <0 the nature of this divergence is strikingly different for hole and electron doping. For electron doping a conventional exponential divergence is found, in quantitative agreement with experiment. For hole doping   a broad susceptibility plateau is found around Q→=(π,π), leading to a very sluggish susceptibility divergence and favoring competition with incommensurate phases. The resulting model can reconcile conflicting data on ξ from NMR and neutron scattering data.Thus, (1) for both electron and hole doping superconductivity is optimized near a QPT at which T=0 antiferro-magnetic ordering vanishes. (2) Electron doped cuprates appear to have little complication from incommensurate magnetic order or nanoscale phase separation. (3) Hence, the electron-doped cuprates can form a bridge between that class of strongly correlated systems—mostly heavy fermion compounds—where superconductivity arises near a magnetic QPT, and the hole-doped cuprates, where the QPT seems complicated by competing orders and proximity to the Van Hove singularity (VHS).

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
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