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Doping-dependent Evolution of the Electronic Structure of La2-xSrxCuO4 in the Superconducting and Metallic Phases

TLDR
The electronic structure of the LSCO system has been studied by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) as discussed by the authors, where the authors report on the evolution of the Fermi surface, the superconducting gap, and the band dispersion around the extended saddle point with hole doping in the super-conducting and metallic phases.
Abstract
The electronic structure of the ${\mathrm{La}}_{2\ensuremath{-}x}{\mathrm{Sr}}_{x}{\mathrm{CuO}}_{4}$ (LSCO) system has been studied by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). We report on the evolution of the Fermi surface, the superconducting gap, and the band dispersion around the extended saddle point $\mathbf{k}=(\ensuremath{\pi},0)$ with hole doping in the superconducting and metallic phases. As hole concentration x decreases, the flat band at $(\ensuremath{\pi},0)$ moves from above the Fermi level ${(E}_{\mathrm{F}})$ for $xg0.2$ to below ${E}_{\mathrm{F}}$ for $xl0.2,$ and is further lowered down to $x=0.05.$ From the leading-edge shift of ARPES spectra, the magnitude of the superconducting gap around $(\ensuremath{\pi},0)$ is found to monotonically increase as x decreases from $x=0.30$ down to $x=0.05$ even though ${T}_{c}$ decreases in the underdoped region, and the superconducting gap appears to smoothly evolve into the normal-state gap at $x=0.05.$ It is shown that the energy scales characterizing these low-energy structures have similar doping dependences. For the heavily overdoped sample $(x=0.30),$ the band dispersion and the ARPES spectral line shape are analyzed using a simple phenomenological self-energy form, and the electronic effective mass enhancement factor ${m}^{*}{/m}_{b}\ensuremath{\simeq}2$ has been found. As the hole concentration decreases, an incoherent component that cannot be described within the simple self-energy analysis grows intense in the high-energy tail of the ARPES peak. Some unusual features of the electronic structure observed for the underdoped region $(x\ensuremath{\lesssim}0.10)$ are consistent with numerical works on the stripe model.

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Extraction of the pseudogap energy scale from the static magnetic susceptibility of single and double CuO2 plane high-Tc cuprates

TL;DR: The effect of added holes per CuO2 plane, p, on the temperature-dependent uniform (q = 0, where q is the wavevector) magnetic susceptibility, χ(T), of YBa2Cu3O7−δ and La2−xSrxCuO4 compounds was investigated over a wide range of oxygen deficiencies (δ) and Sr contents (x).
Journal ArticleDOI

Bond-length fluctuations in the copper oxide superconductors

TL;DR: In this article, it is argued that crossover occurs at an optimal doping concentration for the formation of ordered two-electron/two-hole bosonic bags of spin S = 0 in a matrix of localized spins; the correlation bags contain two holes in a linear cluster of four copper centres ordered within alternate Cu?O?Cu rows of a CuO2 sheet.
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Three-dimensional dispersion induced by extreme tensile strain in La_(2−x)Sr_xCuO_4 films

TL;DR: In this article, the electronic band structure probed by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy on thin epitaxial La2-xSrxCuO4 films under extreme tensile strain was analyzed using a 3D tight-binding dispersion for a body centered-tetragonal lattice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quasiparticle self-consistent GW study of cuprates: electronic structure, model parameters, and the two-band theory for Tc.

TL;DR: Using the quasiparticle self-consistent GW (QSGW) method, the authors re-examine the electronic structure of copper oxide high-Tc materials and show that QSGW captures several important features, distinctive from the conventional LDA results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electronic band structure of optimal superconductors: From cuprates to ferropnictides and back again (Review Article)

TL;DR: In this article, a general mechanism of the Tc enhancement in all known high-Tc superconductors is likely related with the proximity of certain Van Hove singularities to the Fermi level.
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