Filling a Gap in Understanding
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Beginning in 1986, the cuprates were discovered to have much higher
superconducting transition temperatures (Tc) than known metallic
superconductors. Among the possible explanations for high-Tc superconductivity,
the pseudogap state has played a prominent role. In metals, electrons
occupy a continuous spectrum of quantum states up to a maximum
energy known as the Fermi level. When the metal is superchilled
to become a superconductor, a forbidden energy gap opens up at
the Fermi energy.
Experiments in recent years have shown that the spectrum in the
superconducting state of high-Tc cuprates is characterized
by a “nodal-antinodal
dichotomy": when plotted in reciprocal (momentum) space, the spectrum
is shaped like a cloverleaf, exhibiting a gap in the so-called
antinodal direction (parallel to the Cu-O bonds), which vanishes
along the nodal direction (from the origin running diagonal to
the Cu-O chemical bonds). This dichotomous character of
the excitation spectrum is generally assumed to be linked to the ”d-wave” symmetry
of the superconducting state.
In the high-Tc cuprates, this dichotomous gap structure
persists even above Tc and gives rise to the so-called “pseudogap
state” with finite “Fermi arcs” replacing the
original nodal points of the superconducting state. More
intriguingly, the pseudogap appears to have two energy scales,
with a low-energy pseudogap comparable to that of the superconducting
gap and a much larger high-energy pseudogap. Naturally, the
high-energy pseudogap is taken to represent the dominating physics.
The investigators used angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES) at
ALS Beamline 10.0.1 to study a two-layer manganite compound consisting
of a mixture of lanthanum, strontium, manganese, and oxygen (LSMO).
Such manganese oxide materials become ferromagnetic below a certain
critical temperature and display colossal magnetoresistance (CMR),
meaning their electrical resistance can change by orders of magnitude
in the presence of a magnetic field.
ARPES data for three magnifications plots photoelectron
intensity variation with energy (relative to the Fermi level)
and momentum in the nodal direction. Color represents photoelectron
intensity (white=highest to dark blue=lowest). Momentum is determined
from the angle of emission. The need for high energy and angular
resolution is apparent upon realizing that the data analyzed
in this experiment are those contained in the right arm of the
light blue “V” in
the left low-magnification image.
The investigators were quite surprised when the LSMO manganites
displayed the characteristic signatures of the pseudogap state
as found in the cuprates, including the nodal and antinodal dichotomy.
These findings therefore cast doubt on the assumption that the
pseudogap state and the nodal-antinodal dichotomy are hallmarks
of the superconductivity state and suggests they are a more general
phenomenon characteristic of transition-metal oxides.
Energy distribution curves (EDCs) plot photoelectron
intensity variation with energy for fixed momentum. The set of
EDCs is obtained by taking vertical line scans through the ARPES
data at various momenta. The two features labeled “H” (red)
and “Quasi-particle” (blue)
are associated respectively with a particular electron band (designated
eg) and a small quasiparticle peak with polaronic features visible
both as its small spectral weight (intensity) and its very narrow
dispersion (variation of energy with momentum).
Moreover, these ARPES experiments suggest the occurrence of a
polaronic metal with anisotropic band structure. A polaron is a "quasiparticle" formed
when an electron causes a large distortion around it in the atomic
lattice of a crystal. Since the surrounding atoms are much more
massive than the bare electron, the polaron behaves as a negatively
charged particle with a larger mass and lower mobility than an
isolated electron. Earlier research at the ALS had linked the formation
of polarons in LMSO to the CMR effect ("Polaron
Behavior in CMR Manganites").
The locus of the momenta corresponding to a
crossing of the Fermi level (“Fermi momenta”) defines
a Fermi surface in momentum space (curved lines in g). G marks
the origin of momentum space. Here a series of EDC sets for angular
scans crossing the Fermi surface displays the nodal-antinodal
dichotomy: the quasiparticle peak in the nodal direction (a)
loses its intensity rather quickly while moving towards the antinodal
direction (f).
This latest research goes farther and indicates that polaron formation
is crucial to CMR. What might be even more interesting is the now
emerging picture that polarons are the basic constituents of a
poorly understood mysterious metallic phase that is present in
both CMR materials and so-called underdoped high-Tc cuprates
and likely ubiquitous to all transition-metal oxides. A proper
understanding of this new phase will go a long way in capturing
the essence of important phenomena such as colossal magnetoresistance
and high-temperature superconductivity.
A series of EDC sets taken at temperatures from
15 K to 120 K shows that the nodal quasiparticle feature disappears
as the temperature is raised to the ferromagnetic transition
temperature (Curie temperature) at which LSMO also becomes insulating.
The H feature does not show a dramatic temperature dependence,
as predicted by recent theoretical models describing a polaronic
scenario.
Research conducted by N. Mannella, W. Yang, and X.J. Zhou (Stanford
University, Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, and ALS);
H. Zheng and J.F. Mitchell
(Argonne National Laboratory); J. Zaanen (Stanford University,
Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, and Leiden University,
The Netherlands); T.P. Devereaux (University of Waterloo, Canada);
N. Nagasosa (University of Tokyo and Correlated Electron Research
Center, Tsukuba, Japan); Z. Hussain (ALS); and Z.-X. Shen (Stanford
University and Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory).
Research Funding: U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy
Sciences (BES); National Science Foundation; and Office of Naval
Research. Operation of the ALS is supported by BES.
Publication about this research: N. Mannella, W. Yang, X.J. Zhou,
H. Zheng, J.F. Mitchell,
J. Zaanen, T.P. Devereaux, N. Nagasosa, Z. Hussain, and Z.-X. Shen, “Nodal
quasiparticles in pseudo-gapped colossal magnetoresistive manganites,” Nature 438,
474 (2005).
ALSNews Vol. 264, April 26, 2006 |