4.3 Article

A Theory for the High-Tc Cuprates: Anomalous Normal-State and Spectroscopic Properties, Phase Diagram, and Pairing

Journal

JOURNAL OF SUPERCONDUCTIVITY AND NOVEL MAGNETISM
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 1281-1308

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10948-010-0823-8

Keywords

Superconductivity; Cuprates; Auxiliary particles; Anomalies; Pairing

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A theory of highly correlated layered superconducting materials is applied for the cuprates. Differently from an independent-electron approximation, their low-energy excitations are approached in terms of auxiliary particles representing combinations of atomic-like electron configurations, where the introduction of a Lagrange Bose field enables treating them as bosons or fermions. The energy spectrum of this field accounts for the tendency of hole-doped cuprates to form stripe-like inhomogeneities. Consequently, it induces a different analytical behavior for auxiliary particles corresponding to antinodal and nodal electrons, enabling the existence of different pairing temperatures at T (au) and T (c) . This theory correctly describes the observed phase diagram of the cuprates, including the non-Fermi-liquid to FL crossover in the normal state, the existence of Fermi arcs below T (au) and of a marginal-FL critical behavior above it. The qualitative anomalous behavior of numerous physical quantities is accounted for, including kink- and waterfall-like spectral features, the drop in the scattering rates below T (au) and more radically below T (c) , and an effective increase in the density of carriers with T and omega, reflected in transport, optical and other properties. Also is explained the correspondence between T (c) , the resonance-mode energy, and the nodal gap.

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