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New wrinkle in the mystery of high-Tc superconductors
March 17, 2006
In the twenty years since the discovery of high-temperature (Tc) superconductors, scientists have been trying to understand the mechanism by which electrons pair up and move coherently to carry electrical current with no resistance. "We are still at the beginning," says Tonica Valla, a physicist at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, who will give a talk on his group's latest results at the American Physical Society meeting in Baltimore, Maryland on Thursday, March 16, 2006. "If anything," he adds, "it looks like the story is getting more complicated." In 1999, Valla's group was the first to observe a "kink" in the energy level of electrons in high-Tc superconductors just as they went through the transition temperature from their normal to superconducting state. The kink was the first clue to explaining what the mechanism of electron pairing might be.
"The kink gave us the hope that we could identify the interaction that was responsible for the electron pairing," said Valla. Some groups hold that the mechanism is the same as in conventional superconductors - that is, that phonons, or vibrations in the crystal lattice, are responsible for electron pairing. Other scientists believe that changes in the spin alignment, or magnetic polarity, of adjacent electrons - known as magnons - are responsible. "The problem is that there are both phonons and magnons in the crystal with the energy where we see the kink, so it is still not clear," Valla says.
The latest wrinkle uncovered by Valla's group is the observation of similar energy scales and gaps in a material that is not a superconductor. The material is a special form of a compound made of lanthanum, barium, copper, and oxygen, where there is exactly one barium atom for every eight copper atoms. With less or more barium, the material acts as a high-Tc superconductor (in fact, this was the very first high-Tc superconductor discovered). But at the 1:8 ratio, the material momentarily loses its superconductivity.
"The fact that this system, which is not a superconductor, has similar properties to the superconducting system is not helping to solve the mystery," Valla says. But then he notes that 20 years since the discovery of high-Tc superconductors is still not that long. "For conventional superconductors," he says, "it took about 50 years to come up with a good explanation for the behavior."
Valla's talk is part of a session on the use of angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy in the study of high-Tc superconductors. It will include a discussion of advances in this technique. His group uses bright beams of ultraviolet light at the National Synchrotron Light Source, one of Brookhaven Lab's premiere research facilities, to emit electrons from the samples they are studying. Using high-resolution spectrometers, the scientists measure the energy and the angle at which the electrons exit the crystal, allowing them to reconstruct the electrons' state while in the crystal - their energy level and whether they had any interactions with phonons/magnons.
The talk will take place on Thursday, March 16, 2006 at 3:06 p.m. in Ballroom IV of the Baltimore Convention Center.
DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory
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Perovskite-Type Layered Cuprates (High-tc Superconductors and Related Compounds)
by Z.A. Kazei (Author), I.B. Krynetskii (Author), H.P.J. Wijn (Editor)
The magnetic properties of oxides with perovskite, corundum, ilmenite and amorphous structures have been compiled in subvolume 27F. Part 27F2, published in 1994, presents magnetic data on perovskite-type layered cuprates which were discovered to show superconductivity with critical temperatures above 40 K (high-Tc superconductors). The present volume 27F2S is an update and extension of 27F2 with more precise data on high quality single crystals and some new effects and phenomena, covering the literature of the period 1991-2000.
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High-Tc Superconductors and Organic Conductors (Handbook of Advanced Electronic and Photonic Materials and Devices, Volume 3)
by Hari Singh Nalwa (Author)
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The Gap Symmetry and Fluctuations in High-Tc Superconductors (NATO Science Series: B:)
by Julien Bok (Editor), Guy Deutscher (Editor), Davor Pavuna (Editor), Stuart A. Wolf (Editor)
Proceedings of a NATO ASI held in Carg se, France, September 1-13, 199 7.
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Oxygen Disorder Effects in High-Tc Superconductors
by Ivan K. Schuller (Author), J. L. Moran-Lopez (Author)
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Electronic Properties of High-Tc Superconductors: The Normal and the Superconducting State of High-Tc Materials : Proceedings of the International Wi (Springer Series in Solid-State Sciences)
by H. Kuzmany (Author), M. Mehring (Author), J. Fink (Editor)
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High-Tc Superconductors and Related Materials: Materials Science, Fundamental Properties, and Some Future Electronic Applications (NATO Science Partnership Sub-Series: 3:)
by S.-L. Drechsler (Editor), T. Mishonov (Editor)
A broad introduction to high Tc superconductors, their parent compounds and related novel materials, covering both fundamental questions of modern solid state physics (such as correlation effects, fluctuations, unconventional symmetry of superconducting order parameter) and applied problems related to short coherence length, grain boundaries and thin films. The information that can be derived from electron spectroscopy and optical measurements is illustrated and explained in detail. Descriptions widely employ the clear, relatively simple, phenomenological Ginzburg-Landau model of complex phenomena, such as vortex physics, vortex charge determination, plasmons in superconductors, Cooper pair mass, and wetting of surfaces. The first comprehensive reviews of several novel classes...
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Operator Algebraic Formulation and Numerical Evaluation of Inhomogeneous High Tc Superconductor Models
by Roland Münzner (Author)
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High Tc Superconductor Thin Films: Proceedings of Symposium A1 on High Temperature Superconductor Thin Films of the International Conference on Adva
by L. Correra (Editor)
Interdisciplinary research on superconducting oxides is the main focus of the contributions in this volume. Several aspects of the thin film field from fundamental properties to applications are examined. Interesting results for the Bi system are also reviewed. The 132 papers, including 8 invited, report mainly on the 1-2-3 system, indicating that the Y-Ba-Cu-O and related compounds are still the most intensively studied materials in this field. The volume attests to the significant progress that has been made in this field, as well as reporting on the challenging problems that still remain to be solved.
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Electronic Properties of High-Tc Superconductors and Related Compounds: Proceedings of the International Winter School, Kirchberg, Tyrol, March 3-10, (Springer Series in Solid-State Sciences)
by H. Kuzmany (Editor), H. Kuzmany (Editor), M. Mehring (Editor), J. Fink (Editor), International Winter School on Electronic Properties of High temperatu (Editor)
This collection of recent results reports the transport-property measurements of high-Tc superconductors and investigations by means of microwave conductivity, optical spectroscopy, high-energy spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance. Further contributions consider problems related to structure, doping, the electron-phonon interaction, electron correlation and mechanisms of high-Tc superconductivity. Reviews providing introductions for non-specialists to particular areas are followed by research reports detailing current understanding.
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Spectroscopy of High-Tc Superconductors: A Theoretical View
by N.M. Plakida (Editor)
This book provides an up-to-date and comprehensive review of the experimental results and theoretical interpretations concerning elementary excitation spectra in high-Tc superconductor, both in the normal and superconducting states, and suggests directions where future experimental and theoretical efforts should be concentrated. A critical comparison of different theoretical models involving strong electron correlations, spin fluctuations and electron-phonon coupling is given.
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