4.8 Article

Quantum oscillations in an overdoped high-Tc superconductor

Journal

NATURE
Volume 455, Issue 7215, Pages 952-955

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature07323

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EPSRC
  2. LNCMP
  3. French ANR IceNET
  4. EuroMagNET
  5. EPSRC [EP/F038836/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  6. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/C511778/1, EP/C523229/1, EP/F038836/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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The nature of the metallic phase in the high- transition- temperature ( high-T(c)) copper oxide superconductors, and its evolution with carrier concentration, has been a long-standing mystery(1). A central question is how coherent electronic states, or quasiparticles, emerge from the antiferromagnetic insulator with doping. Recent quantum oscillation experiments on lightly doped copper oxides have shown evidence for small pockets of Fermi surface(2-5), the formation of which has been associated with the opening of the pseudogap - ananisotropic gap in the normal state excitation spectrum of unknown origin(1). As the doping is increased, experiments suggest that the full Fermi surface is restored(6,7), although the doping level at which the pseudogap closes and the nature of the electronic ground state beyond this point have yet to be determined. Here we report the observation of quantum oscillations in the over-doped superconductor Tl(2)Ba(2)CuO(6+delta) that show the existence of a large Fermi surface of well- defined quasiparticles covering two-thirds of the Brillouin zone. These measurements confirm that, in overdoped superconducting copper oxides, coherence is established at all Fermi wavevectors, even near the zone boundary where the pseudogap is maximal and electronic interactions are strongest; they also firmly establish the applicability of a generalized Fermi-liquid picture on the overdoped side of the superconducting phase diagram.

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