Pairing, pair-breaking, and their roles in setting the Tc of cuprate high temperature superconductors
cond-mat.supr-con
/ Authors
T. J. Reber, S. Parham, N. C. Plumb, Y. Cao, H. Li, Z. Sun, Q. Wang, H. Iwasawa, M. Arita, J. S. Wen
and 6 more authors
Z. J. Xu, G. D. Gu, Y. Yoshida, H. Eisaki, G. B. Arnold, D. S. Dessau
/ Abstract
The key ingredients in any superconductor are the Cooper pairs, in which two electrons combine to form a composite boson. In all conventional superconductors the pairing strength alone sets the majority of the physical properties including the superconducting transition temperature T$_c$. In the cuprate high temperature superconductors, no such link has yet been found between the pairing interactions and T$_c$. Using a new variant of photoelectron spectroscopy we measure both the pair-forming ($Δ$) and a self energy/pair-breaking term ($Γ_s$) as a function of sample type and sample temperature, and we make the measurements over a wide range of doping and temperatures within and outside of the pseudogap/competing order doping regimes. In all cases we find that T$_c$ is approximately set by a crossover between the pair-forming strength $Δ$ and 3 times the self-energy term $Γ_s$ - a new paradigm for superconductivity. In addition to departing from conventional superconductivity in which the pairing alone sets T$_c$, these results indicate the zero-order importance of the near-nodal self-energy effects compared to competing order/pseudogap effects.