Suppression of the antiferromagnetic pseudogap in the electron-doped high-temperature superconductor by protect annealing
/ Authors
M. Horio, T. Adachi, Y. Mori, A. Takahashi, T. Yoshida, H. Suzuki, L. C. C. Ambolode, K. Okazaki, K. Ono, H. Kumigashira
and 12 more authors
H. Anzai, H. Anzai, M. Arita, H. Namatame, M. Taniguchi, M. Taniguchi, D. Ootsuki, K. Sawada, M. Takahashi, T. Mizokawa, Y. Koike, A. Fujimori
/ Abstract
In the hole-doped cuprates, a small number of carriers suppresses antiferromagnetism and induces superconductivity. In the electron-doped cuprates, on the other hand, superconductivity appears only in a narrow window of high-doped Ce concentration after reduction annealing, and strong antiferromagnetic correlation persists in the superconducting phase. Recently, Pr1.3−xLa0.7CexCuO4 (PLCCO) bulk single crystals annealed by a protect annealing method showed a high critical temperature of around 27 K for small Ce content down to 0.05. Here, by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements of PLCCO crystals, we observed a sharp quasi-particle peak on the entire Fermi surface without signature of an antiferromagnetic pseudogap unlike all the previous work, indicating a dramatic reduction of antiferromagnetic correlation length and/or of magnetic moments. The superconducting state was found to extend over a wide electron concentration range. The present results fundamentally challenge the long-standing picture on the electronic structure in the electron-doped regime. In cuprates, superconductivity exists in a narrow window at high electron doping concentration with strong antiferromagnetic correlations. Here, the authors demonstrate superconductivity with no effect of antiferromagnetic order in a cuprate for a wide electron doping range following a protect anneal process.
Journal: Nature Communications
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10567