Title: Spin dynamics in cuprate superconductors
1Spin dynamics in cuprate superconductors
CIAR Superconductivity Program
- T. E. Mason
- Spallation Neutron Source Project
Harrison Hot Springs Dec. 9, 2000
2Neutron Scattering and Spin Fluctuations
- excitations characterized by c(Q,w) è a measure
of absorption at (Q,w). - neutron scattering measures
- S(Q,w) c(Q,w) n(w)1.
- note Q è0, recover uniform susceptibility.
- the proportionality constant involves magnetic
moment direction and form factor.
3co(Q,w) for Metals
- Excitations are electron-hole pairs
- Lindhard susceptibility
- As T è0 states near eF dominate
- Note NMR relaxation rate
-
4Facilities
- Neutron scattering measurements were carried out
using TAS6 (RITA) at Risø, IN20 at the ILL , and
MARI at ISIS.
5(La,Nd)2-xSrxCuO4
Vaknin et al (1987)
- Pure La2CuO4 is an insulating antiferromagnet
with quasi-two-dimensional magnetic interactions - Doping with Sr (or Ba) suppresses TN, introduces
holes in the CuO2 planes, and leads to
superconductivity (maximum Tc39 K for x0.15)
6Paramagnetic Critical Scattering
- Antiferromagnetic correlations in La2CuO4 above
TN are well described by renormalized classical
model (see Keimer et al (1992) and Birgeneau et
al (1995))
7La2CuO4 Spin Wave Response
(Hayden et al, 1991)
(Hayden et al, 1990)
- The magnetic excitations of undoped La2CuO4 are
well described by (renormalized) classical spin
wave theory for the 2D spin 1/2 Heisenberg
antiferromagnet
8Stripe Ordering
- Tranquada et al have shown that static, long
range ordering of spin and charge occurs in
(La,Nd)2-xSrxCuO4 pinned to the LTT structural
distortion at x1/8.
9Effect of Doping
- The high energy magnetic excitations in nearly
optimally doped La2-xSrxCuO4 retain the
characteristics of the antiferromagnet - slightly softened maximum energy
- same periodicity with broader momentum
distribution
10Energy Integrated Response
- The correlation length extracted from S(Q)
decreases from 6.2 Ã… in La2CuO4 (T295 K) to 3.7
Ã… (ao) in La1.86Sr0.14CuO4 (17 K) however the
bulk of the spin fluctuations are still AF in
nature.
11Local Susceptibility
- A new energy scale (25 meV) is present in the
metallic sample
12Low Energy Excitations in the Metallic State
x0.075
x0.14
(Yamada et al, 1998)
1 meV, 12 K
2 meV, 35 K (gtTc)
- For metallic compositions the low energy response
has shifted away from the commensurate (p,p)
position along the (p,0) direction. - The peaks are well defined (xgtao/Öx).
13Normal State Energy Dependence
- As the frequency is increased the peaks become
less well defined. - The response is qualitatively quite similar to
that of the spin density wave system Cr, above TN.
14Increased Energy, Temperature Have Similar Effects
- A combination of polarized and unpolarized
measurements have permitted a reliable
determination of the Q and w dependence of the
magnetic response over a wide range of
temperature.
15Temperature Dependence
- The magnetic intensity drops off rapidly with T.
- The peak susceptibility varies as 1/T2 between Tc
(35 K) and 350 K. - This trend is interrupted by superconductivity
below Tc the response is suppressed. - The inverse length scale extracted from
resolution corrected fits to the lineshape
increases systematically with increasing T or w.
16w,T Scaling
- The inverse length scale which characterizes the
peak width at a given energy and temperature is
well described by
- In the T,w è0 limit k è ko0.034Å for x0.14
and 0.06 Ã… for x0.17 - The fact that w and k enter with the same
exponent implies z 1where z is the dynamical
exponent. Together with the 1/T2 susceptibility
this implies h1.
The inset shows cP/w vs T varying with an
exponent of 3 for z1 this implies h0.
Ambiguity because of ko.
17Quantum Criticality
- Taken together these results reveal that
La1.86Sr0.14CuO4 is close to a quantum critical
point characterized by exponents z1, h0. These
exponents are consistent with expectations for
the QCP associated with 2D insulating magnets
(Sachdev and Ye, 1992 Chubukov et al, 1994). - Alternatively z1, h1 would be expected for 1D
quantum antiferromagnets (Luther Peschel,
1975). - The similarity of the dynamic fluctuations to the
patterns observed in the ordered stripe phases
for Nd doped sample suggests a connection.
18Link to Commensurate Stripe Instability?
- The observation that the residual ko for
La1.83Sr0.17CuO4 is larger points to lower
doping... - The low energy length scale extracted from
studies at various doping levels becomes
anomalously large near x1/8 the concentration
for which commensurate stripe order occurs nearby
in phase space and for which short range
structural features have been observed in
La2-x(Ba,Sr)xCuO4.
19Recap - Normal State
- Insulator, MFL
- broad, commensurate response
- La2-x(Ba,Sr)xCuO4 (x0.05)
- Insulator, Antiferromagnet
- spin waves
- La2CuO4 (x0)
- Metal incommensurate response
- La2-xSrxCuO4 (x0.14, 0.17)
Temperature and energy dependence of c for the
metallic samples suggests proximity to T0 QCP.
20YBa2Cu3O6x Spin Dynamics
- Spin dynamics of antiferromagnetically ordered
Y123 also well described by (renormalized)
classical spin wave theory, including bi-layer
coupling (see work by Tranquada et al,
Rossat-Mignod et al, and Hayden et al)
21Superconducting YBa2Cu3O7-x
- Low energy, commensurate Q(p,p ), acoustic
mode response in the normal state of four
different compositions of YBa2Cu3O7-x measured at
100 K. - As the doping is increased the feature at (p ,p )
broadens and weakens, and there is very little
normal state response at the commensurate
position for the overdoped sample. From Bourges
et al. (1998).
22Incommensurate fluctuations in YBa2Cu3O7-x
- Images of the magnetic scattering from
YBa2Cu3O6.6 above and below Tc at 34 and 24.5 meV
in the two dimensional reciprocal space of the
CuO2 planes. - At the lower energy (e,f) an incommensurate
response, described by the model shown in d,
appears at the positions noted in the schematic
map, a. The resonance appears at the (p, p)
position (b,c) in the superconducting state. From
Mook et al. (1998a).
23The (p,p) resonance
- Variation of the (p, p) resonance energy with
superconducting transition temperature, Tc. From
Bourges (1998). - A similar feature is also seen in BSSCO (Keimer
et al)
24The resonance in underdoped Y123
- Temperature dependence of the 35 meV resonance in
YBa2Cu3O6.6 with temperature. - A broadened response at (p,p) persists in the
normal state for underdoped compositions. From
Mook et al. (1998b).
25Superconductivity in LSCO
- Superconductivity suppresses the low energy
response (below 8 meV) and enhances the higher
energy response - The extent of the suppression is
sample/composition dependent - Data shown is for x0.16, further from QCP than
x0.14 sample - more metallic, better sc
26Changes Induced by Superconductivity are
Significant
- Suppression at low T is complete
- Consistent with x0.15 (Yamada et al)
- Higher energy response shows different Q
dependence in sc state - Response at incommensurate point is sharper
27Momentum Dependence
- Analysis of the momentum dependence of the
inelastic response reveals that - magnetic gap does not vary with Q - 6.7 meV
- inverse lifetime or broadening of the gap is
momentum dependent with a minimum at the
incommensurate wavevector - the incommensurate peak in the real part of the
susceptibility is reduced by superconductivity
28Recap - Superconductivity
- The wavevector independence of the spin gap is in
contrast to the nodal structure seen in the
charge channel for high Tc cuprates - this deviation of the behavior of spin and charge
may be taken as evidence of spin-charge
separation - at the very least it implies simple
(non-interacting) models of the effects of d-wave
superconductivity on the susceptibility are
inadequate
- Suppression of c implies sc competes with stripe
instability
29Recap
- Absence of low energy spin response along the
(p,p) direction is not expected in simple models
with nodal quasiparticles. - Although statistics limit the bound on low w, low
T signal the very strong effects at higher
energies, including Q-independence of spin gap
are well established and visible, even in the raw
data. - Enhancement and sharpening in Q for w gt 8 meV.
- Minima in inverse lifetime at the incommensurate
points. - (p,p) resonance observed in other cuprates,
notably Y123, not found in single layer La214,
appears above Tc for underdoped Y123. - Incommensurate spin fluctuations seem to be
common feature at least for underdoped
compositions.