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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Superconducting gaps and pseudogaps in a composite model of two-component cuprate

TL;DR: In this article, a descriptive interband model of cuprate superconductivity with two-subbands of the defect component is developed, which is related to hot and cold regions of the momentum space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mottness collapse and T-linear resistivity in cuprate superconductors.

TL;DR: The degrees of freedom that mix into the lower band as a result of dynamical spectral weight transfer are shown to either decouple beyond a critical doping, thereby signalling Mottness collapse, or unbind above a critical temperature, yielding strange metal behaviour characterized by T-linear resistivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Composite fermion theory for pseudogap phenomena and superconductivity in underdoped cuprate superconductors

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study pseudogap phenomena and Fermi-arc formation experimentally observed in typical two-dimensional doped Mott insulators, namely, underdoped cuprate superconductors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Superconducting condensation energy and pseudogap formation in La2-xSrxCuO4: New energy scale for superconductivity

TL;DR: In this paper, the electronic specific heat was measured for La 2-x Sr x CuO 4 to examine the superconducting condensation energy at T = 0, U 0, and it was shown that U 0 is markedly reduced even in slightly underdoped samples whose T c's are still more than 30 K.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum interference between nonmagnetic impurities in d x 2 − y 2 -wave superconductors

TL;DR: In this article, the quantum interference of electronic waves that are scattered by multiple nonmagnetic impurities in a superconductor was studied and it was shown that the number of resonance states in the density of states, as well as their frequency and spatial dependence change significantly as the distance between the impurities or their orientation relative to the crystal lattice is varied.
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