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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3513, 2024 Apr 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38664403

RESUMO

The thermal Hall effect has emerged as a potential probe of exotic excitations in spin liquids. In the Kitaev magnet α -RuCl3, the thermal Hall conductivity κ x y has been attributed to Majorana fermions, chiral magnons, or phonons. Theoretically, the former two types of heat carriers can generate a "planar" κ x y , whereby the magnetic field is parallel to the heat current, but it is unknown whether phonons also could. Here we show that a planar κ x y is present in another Kitaev candidate material, Na2Co2TeO6. Based on the striking similarity between κ x y and the phonon-dominated thermal conductivity κ x x , we attribute the effect to phonons. We observe a large difference in κ x y between different configurations of heat current and magnetic field, which reveals that the direction of heat current matters in determining the planar κ x y . Our observation calls for a re-evaluation of the planar κ x y observed in α -RuCl3.

2.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 3033, 2023 May 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37236962

RESUMO

Materials tuned to a quantum critical point display universal scaling properties as a function of temperature T and frequency ω. A long-standing puzzle regarding cuprate superconductors has been the observed power-law dependence of optical conductivity with an exponent smaller than one, in contrast to T-linear dependence of the resistivity and ω-linear dependence of the optical scattering rate. Here, we present and analyze resistivity and optical conductivity of La2-xSrxCuO4 with x = 0.24. We demonstrate ℏω/kBT scaling of the optical data over a wide range of frequency and temperature, T-linear resistivity, and optical effective mass proportional to [Formula: see text] corroborating previous specific heat experiments. We show that a T, ω-linear scaling Ansatz for the inelastic scattering rate leads to a unified theoretical description of the experimental data, including the power-law of the optical conductivity. This theoretical framework provides new opportunities for describing the unique properties of quantum critical matter.

3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(34): e2208016119, 2022 Aug 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35969770

RESUMO

Phonons are known to generate a thermal Hall effect in certain insulators, including oxides with rare-earth impurities, quantum paraelectrics, multiferroic materials, and cuprate Mott insulators. In each case, a special feature of the material is presumed relevant for the underlying mechanism that confers chirality to phonons in a magnetic field. A fundamental question is whether a phonon Hall effect is an unusual occurrence-linked to special characteristics such as skew scattering off rare-earth impurities, structural domains, ferroelectricity, or ferromagnetism-or a much more common property of insulators than hitherto believed. To help answer this question, we have turned to a material with none of the previously encountered special features: the cubic antiferromagnet Cu3TeO6. We find that its thermal Hall conductivity [Formula: see text] is among the largest of any insulator so far. We show that this record-high [Formula: see text] signal is due to phonons, and it does not require the presence of magnetic order, as it persists above the ordering temperature. We conclude that the phonon Hall effect is likely to be a fairly common property of solids.

4.
Nature ; 595(7869): 667-672, 2021 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34321673

RESUMO

A variety of 'strange metals' exhibit resistivity that decreases linearly with temperature as the temperature decreases to zero1-3, in contrast to conventional metals where resistivity decreases quadratically with temperature. This linear-in-temperature resistivity has been attributed to charge carriers scattering at a rate given by h/τ = αkBT, where α is a constant of order unity, h is the Planck constant and kB is the Boltzmann constant. This simple relationship between the scattering rate and temperature is observed across a wide variety of materials, suggesting a fundamental upper limit on scattering-the 'Planckian limit'4,5-but little is known about the underlying origins of this limit. Here we report a measurement of the angle-dependent magnetoresistance of La1.6-xNd0.4SrxCuO4-a hole-doped cuprate that shows linear-in-temperature resistivity down to the lowest measured temperatures6. The angle-dependent magnetoresistance shows a well defined Fermi surface that agrees quantitatively with angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements7 and reveals a linear-in-temperature scattering rate that saturates at the Planckian limit, namely α = 1.2 ± 0.4. Remarkably, we find that this Planckian scattering rate is isotropic, that is, it is independent of direction, in contrast to expectations from 'hotspot' models8,9. Our findings suggest that linear-in-temperature resistivity in strange metals emerges from a momentum-independent inelastic scattering rate that reaches the Planckian limit.

5.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 5325, 2020 Oct 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33087726

RESUMO

The heat carriers responsible for the unexpectedly large thermal Hall conductivity of the cuprate Mott insulator La2CuO4 were recently shown to be phonons. However, the mechanism by which phonons in cuprates acquire chirality in a magnetic field is still unknown. Here, we report a similar thermal Hall conductivity in two cuprate Mott insulators with significantly different crystal structures and magnetic orders - Nd2CuO4 and Sr2CuO2Cl2 - and show that two potential mechanisms can be excluded - the scattering of phonons by rare-earth impurities and by structural domains. Our comparative study further reveals that orthorhombicity, apical oxygens, the tilting of oxygen octahedra and the canting of spins out of the CuO2 planes are not essential to the mechanism of chirality. Our findings point to a chiral mechanism coming from a coupling of acoustic phonons to the intrinsic excitations of the CuO2 planes.

6.
Nat Commun ; 8(1): 2044, 2017 12 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29229909

RESUMO

The properties of cuprate high-temperature superconductors are largely shaped by competing phases whose nature is often a mystery. Chiefly among them is the pseudogap phase, which sets in at a doping p* that is material-dependent. What determines p* is currently an open question. Here we show that the pseudogap cannot open on an electron-like Fermi surface, and can only exist below the doping p FS at which the large Fermi surface goes from hole-like to electron-like, so that p* ≤ p FS. We derive this result from high-magnetic-field transport measurements in La1.6-x Nd0.4Sr x CuO4 under pressure, which reveal a large and unexpected shift of p* with pressure, driven by a corresponding shift in p FS. This necessary condition for pseudogap formation, imposed by details of the Fermi surface, is a strong constraint for theories of the pseudogap phase. Our finding that p* can be tuned with a modest pressure opens a new route for experimental studies of the pseudogap.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 117(9): 097003, 2016 Aug 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27610878

RESUMO

The thermal conductivity κ of the iron-based superconductor FeSe was measured at temperatures down to 75 mK in magnetic fields up to 17 T. In a zero magnetic field, the electronic residual linear term in the T=0 K limit, κ_{0}/T, is vanishingly small. The application of a magnetic field B causes an exponential increase in κ_{0}/T initially. Those two observations show that there are no zero-energy quasiparticles that carry heat and therefore no nodes in the superconducting gap of FeSe. The full field dependence of κ_{0}/T has the classic two-step shape of a two-band superconductor: a first rise at very low field, with a characteristic field B^{⋆}≪B_{c2}, and then a second rise up to the upper critical field B_{c2}. This shows that the superconducting gap is very small (but finite) on one of the pockets in the Fermi surface of FeSe. We estimate that the minimum value of the gap, Δ_{min}, is an order of magnitude smaller than the maximum value, Δ_{max}.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 117(1): 016601, 2016 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27419578

RESUMO

The thermal conductivity κ of the heavy-fermion metal CeCoIn_{5} was measured in the normal and superconducting states as a function of temperature T and magnetic field H, for a current and field parallel to the [100] direction. Inside the superconducting state, when the field is lower than the upper critical field H_{c2}, κ/T is found to increase as T→0, just as in a metal and in contrast to the behavior of all known superconductors. This is due to unpaired electrons on part of the Fermi surface, which dominate the transport above a certain field. The evolution of κ/T with field reveals that the electron-electron scattering (or transport mass m^{⋆}) of those unpaired electrons diverges as H→H_{c2} from below, in the same way that it does in the normal state as H→H_{c2} from above. This shows that the unpaired electrons sense the proximity of the field-tuned quantum critical point of CeCoIn_{5} at H^{⋆}=H_{c2} even from inside the superconducting state. The fact that the quantum critical scattering of the unpaired electrons is much weaker than the average scattering of all electrons in the normal state reveals a k-space correlation between the strength of pairing and the strength of scattering, pointing to a common mechanism, presumably antiferromagnetic fluctuations.

9.
Nature ; 531(7593): 210-4, 2016 Mar 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26901870

RESUMO

The pseudogap is a partial gap in the electronic density of states that opens in the normal (non-superconducting) state of cuprate superconductors and whose origin is a long-standing puzzle. Its connection to the Mott insulator phase at low doping (hole concentration, p) remains ambiguous and its relation to the charge order that reconstructs the Fermi surface at intermediate doping is still unclear. Here we use measurements of the Hall coefficient in magnetic fields up to 88 tesla to show that Fermi-surface reconstruction by charge order in the cuprate YBa2Cu3Oy ends sharply at a critical doping p = 0.16 that is distinctly lower than the pseudogap critical point p* = 0.19 (ref. 11). This shows that the pseudogap and charge order are separate phenomena. We find that the change in carrier density n from n = 1 + p in the conventional metal at high doping (ref. 12) to n = p at low doping (ref. 13) starts at the pseudogap critical point. This shows that the pseudogap and the antiferromagnetic Mott insulator are linked.

10.
Nat Commun ; 5: 3280, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24518054

RESUMO

In the quest to increase the critical temperature Tc of cuprate superconductors, it is essential to identify the factors that limit the strength of superconductivity. The upper critical field Hc2 is a fundamental measure of that strength, yet there is no agreement on its magnitude and doping dependence in cuprate superconductors. Here we show that the thermal conductivity can be used to directly detect Hc2 in the cuprates YBa2Cu3Oy, YBa2Cu4O8 and Tl2Ba2CuO6+δ, allowing us to map out Hc2 across the doping phase diagram. It exhibits two peaks, each located at a critical point where the Fermi surface of YBa2Cu3Oy is known to undergo a transformation. Below the higher critical point, the condensation energy, obtained directly from Hc2, suffers a sudden 20-fold collapse. This reveals that phase competition-associated with Fermi-surface reconstruction and charge-density-wave order-is a key limiting factor in the superconductivity of cuprates.

11.
Phys Rev Lett ; 109(8): 087001, 2012 Aug 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23002766

RESUMO

The thermal conductivity κ of the iron arsenide superconductor KFe2As2 was measured down to 50 mK for a heat current parallel and perpendicular to the tetragonal c axis. A residual linear term at T→0, κ(0)/T is observed for both current directions, confirming the presence of nodes in the superconducting gap. Our value of κ(0)/T in the plane is equal to that reported by Dong et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 087005 (2010)] for a sample whose residual resistivity ρ(0) was 10 times larger. This independence of κ(0)/T on impurity scattering is the signature of universal heat transport, a property of superconducting states with symmetry-imposed line nodes. This argues against an s-wave state with accidental nodes. It favors instead a d-wave state, an assignment consistent with five additional properties: the magnitude of the critical scattering rate Γ(c) for suppressing T(c) to zero; the magnitude of κ(0)/T, and its dependence on current direction and on magnetic field; the temperature dependence of κ(T).

12.
Mol Endocrinol ; 25(11): 1961-77, 2011 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21920850

RESUMO

ACTH is the most important stimulus of the adrenal cortex. The precise molecular mechanisms underlying the ACTH response are not yet clarified. The functional ACTH receptor includes melanocortin-2 receptor (MC2R) and MC2R accessory proteins (MRAP). In human embryonic kidney 293/Flp recombinase target cells expressing MC2R, MRAP1 isoforms, and MRAP2, we found that ACTH induced a concentration-dependent and arrestin-, clathrin-, and dynamin-dependent MC2R/MRAP1 internalization, followed by intracellular colocalization with Rab (Ras-like small guanosine triphosphate enzyme)4-, Rab5-, and Rab11-positive recycling endosomes. Preincubation of cells with monensin and brefeldin A revealed that 28% of the internalized receptors were recycled back to the plasma membrane and participated in total accumulation of cAMP. Moreover, certain intracellular Ser and Thr (S/T) residues of MC2R were found to play important roles not only in plasma membrane targeting and function but also in promoting receptor internalization. The S/T residues T131, S140, T204, and S280 were involved in MRAP1-independent cell-surface MC2R expression. Other mutants (S140A, S208A, and S202D) had lower cell-surface expressions in absence of MRAPß. In addition, T143A and T147D drastically impaired cell-surface expression and function, whereas T131A, T131D, and S280D abrogated MC2R internalization. Thus, the modification of MC2R intracellular S/T residues may positively or negatively regulate its plasma membrane expression and the capacity of ACTH to induce cAMP accumulation. Mutations of T131, T143, T147, and S280 into either A or D had major repercussions on cell-surface expression, cAMP accumulation, and/or internalization parameters, pointing mostly to the second intracellular loop as being crucial for MC2R expression and functional regulation.


Assuntos
Receptor Tipo 2 de Melanocortina/metabolismo , Serina/química , Treonina/química , Arrestinas/metabolismo , Western Blotting , Linhagem Celular , Membrana Celular/metabolismo , AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Dinaminas/metabolismo , Endossomos/metabolismo , Ensaio de Imunoadsorção Enzimática , Humanos , Imunoprecipitação , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Ligação Proteica , Receptor Tipo 2 de Melanocortina/química , Receptor Tipo 2 de Melanocortina/genética , Serina/genética , Treonina/genética
13.
Nat Commun ; 2: 432, 2011 Aug 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21847106

RESUMO

The origin of pairing in a superconductor resides in the underlying normal state. In the cuprate high-temperature superconductor YBa(2)Cu(3)O(y) (YBCO), application of a magnetic field to suppress superconductivity reveals a ground state that appears to break the translational symmetry of the lattice, pointing to some density-wave order. Here we use a comparative study of thermoelectric transport in the cuprates YBCO and La(1.8-x)Eu(0.2)Sr(x)CuO(4) (Eu-LSCO) to show that the two materials exhibit the same process of Fermi-surface reconstruction as a function of temperature and doping. The fact that in Eu-LSCO this reconstruction coexists with spin and charge modulations that break translational symmetry shows that stripe order is the generic non-superconducting ground state of hole-doped cuprates.

14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 104(5): 057005, 2010 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20366789

RESUMO

The Seebeck and Nernst coefficients S and nu of the cuprate superconductor YBa{2}Cu{3}O{y} (YBCO) were measured in a single crystal with doping p=0.12 in magnetic fields up to H=28 T. Down to T=9 K, nu becomes independent of field by H approximately 30 T, showing that superconducting fluctuations have become negligible. In this field-induced normal state, S/T and nu/T are both large and negative in the T-->0 limit, with the magnitude and sign of S/T consistent with the small electronlike Fermi surface pocket detected previously by quantum oscillations and the Hall effect. The change of sign in S(T) at T approximately 50 K is remarkably similar to that observed in La2-xBaxCuO4, La{2-x-y}Nd{y}Sr_{x}CuO{4}, and La{2-x-y}Eu{y}Sr{x}CuO{4}, where it is clearly associated with the onset of stripe order. We propose that a similar density-wave mechanism causes the Fermi surface reconstruction in YBCO.

15.
Phys Rev Lett ; 104(6): 067002, 2010 Feb 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20366850

RESUMO

The temperature and magnetic field dependence of the in-plane thermal conductivity kappa of the iron-arsenide superconductor Ba(Fe(1-x)Co(x))2As2 was measured down to T approximately 50 mK and up to H = 15 T as a function of Co concentration x in the range 0.048 < or = x < or = 0.114. At H = 0, a negligible residual linear term in kappa/T as T-->0 at all x shows that the superconducting gap has no nodes in the ab plane anywhere in the phase diagram. However, while the slow H dependence of kappa(H) at T-->0 in the underdoped regime is consistent with a superconducting gap that is large everywhere on the Fermi surface, the rapid increase in kappa(H) observed in the overdoped regime shows that the gap acquires a deep minimum somewhere on the Fermi surface. Outside the antiferromagnetic-orthorhombic phase, the superconducting gap structure has a strongly k-dependent amplitude.

16.
Nature ; 463(7280): 519-22, 2010 Jan 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20110997

RESUMO

The nature of the pseudogap phase is a central problem in the effort to understand the high-transition-temperature (high-T(c)) copper oxide superconductors. A fundamental question is what symmetries are broken when the pseudogap phase sets in, which occurs when the temperature decreases below a value T*. There is evidence from measurements of both polarized neutron diffraction and the polar Kerr effect that time-reversal symmetry is broken, but at temperatures that differ significantly from one another. Broken rotational symmetry was detected from both resistivity measurements and inelastic neutron scattering at low doping, and from scanning tunnelling spectroscopy at low temperature, but showed no clear relation to T*. Here we report the observation of a large in-plane anisotropy of the Nernst effect in YBa(2)Cu(3)O(y) that sets in precisely at T* throughout the doping phase diagram. We show that the CuO chains of the orthorhombic lattice are not responsible for this anisotropy, which is therefore an intrinsic property of the CuO(2) planes. We conclude that the pseudogap phase is an electronic state that strongly breaks four-fold rotational symmetry. This narrows the range of possible states considerably, pointing to stripe or nematic order.

17.
Phys Rev Lett ; 103(15): 157003, 2009 Oct 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19905661

RESUMO

By improving the experimental conditions and extensive data accumulation, we have achieved very high precision in the measurements of the de Haas-van Alphen effect in the underdoped high-temperature superconductor YBa2Cu3O6.5. We find that the main oscillation, so far believed to be single frequency, is composed of three closely spaced frequencies. We attribute this to bilayer splitting and warping of a single quasi-2D Fermi surface, indicating that c axis coherence is restored at low temperature in underdoped cuprates. Our results do not support the existence of a larger frequency of the order of 1650 T reported recently in the same compound [S. E. Sebastian, Nature (London) 454, 200 (2008)].

18.
Nature ; 458(7239): 743-5, 2009 Apr 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19360083

RESUMO

The Nernst effect in metals is highly sensitive to two kinds of phase transition: superconductivity and density-wave order. The large, positive Nernst signal observed in hole-doped high-T(c) superconductors above their transition temperature (T(c)) has so far been attributed to fluctuating superconductivity. Here we report that in some of these materials the large Nernst signal is in fact the result of stripe order, a form of spin/charge modulation that causes a reconstruction of the Fermi surface. In La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO(4) (LSCO) doped with Nd or Eu, the onset of stripe order causes the Nernst signal to change from being small and negative to being large and positive, as revealed either by lowering the hole concentration across the quantum critical point in Nd-doped LSCO (refs 6-8) or by lowering the temperature across the ordering temperature in Eu-doped LSCO (refs 9, 10). In the second case, two separate peaks are resolved, respectively associated with the onset of stripe order at high temperature and superconductivity near T(c).

19.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 21(16): 164212, 2009 Apr 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21825392

RESUMO

The recent observation of quantum oscillations in underdoped high-T(c) superconductors, combined with their negative Hall coefficient at low temperature, reveals that the Fermi surface of hole-doped cuprates includes a small electron pocket. This strongly suggests that the large hole Fermi surface characteristic of the overdoped regime undergoes a reconstruction caused by the onset of some order which breaks translational symmetry. Here we consider the possibility that this order is 'stripe' order, a form of combined charge/spin modulation observed most clearly in materials like Eu-doped and Nd-doped LSCO (La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO(4)). In these materials, the onset of stripe order coincides with major changes in transport properties, providing strong evidence that stripe order is indeed the cause of Fermi surface reconstruction. We identify the critical doping where this reconstruction occurs and show that the temperature dependence of transport coefficients at that doping is typical of metals at a quantum critical point. We discuss how the pseudogap phase may be a fluctuating precursor of the stripe-ordered phase.

20.
Phys Rev Lett ; 101(23): 237005, 2008 Dec 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19113585

RESUMO

Thermal conductivity measurements were performed on single crystal samples of the superconducting filled-skutterudite compounds PrOs4Sb12 and PrRu4Sb12 both as a function of temperature and transverse magnetic field. In a zero magnetic field, the low temperature electronic thermal conductivity of PrRu4Sb12 is consistent with a fully gapped Fermi surface. For PrOs4Sb12, residual electronic conduction in the zero-temperature limit is consistent with the presence of nodes in the superconducting energy gap. The electronic thermal conductivity for both compounds shows a rapid rise at low magnetic fields. In PrRu4Sb12, this is interpreted in terms of multiband effects. In PrOs4Sb12, we consider the Doppler shift of nodal quasiparticles and multiband effects.

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