Country for PR: Japan
Contributor: Kyodo News JBN
Thursday, November 18 2021 - 19:00
AsiaNet
Electrons Move in Preferred Direction in Cuprate Superconductors: WPI-MANA
TSUKUBA, Japan, Nov 18, 2021 /Kyodo JBN-AsiaNet/--

A team at the International Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (WPI-MANA) 
has gleaned important insights into the properties of Lanthanum-based cuprate 
superconductors, the highest-temperature superconducting family yet discovered 
under ambient pressure.

(Image: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M105739/202111052920/_prw_PI1fl_xUCB97EN.jpg)


The team's results imply that, in contrast to common belief among researchers 
for the last 35 years, electrons have a preferred direction along either the x 
or the y axis in each CuO2 plane, and the preferred direction alternates 
between the planes.

High-temperature cuprate superconductors have continued to generate keen 
interest for more than 30 years due to the various phenomena they exhibit with 
changes in carrier doping and temperature, such as the pseudogap phase, nematic 
order, charge-density wave and spin-density wave, as well as superconductivity.

The Fermi surface is fundamental in condensed matter physics for understanding 
metallic properties. Its shape directly reflects the electron motion inside the 
material and as such it is the key to understanding materials' properties. 

High-temperature cuprate superconductors are characterized by stacks of 
copper-oxygen (CuO2) planes, a fact that has convinced many researchers that 
electrons exhibit two-dimensional motion in CuO2 planes. 

The WPI-MANA team, led by Hiroyuki Yamase, applied the high-resolution X-ray 
Compton scattering technique to a sample of La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO4 and imaged the 
momentum distribution of electrons.

The results provide new understanding of the electronic properties of cuprate 
superconductors. Compton scattering can be a powerful tool to elucidate 
electronic properties in materials and sometimes works beyond other widely 
employed techniques. The researchers said it will be exciting to see the 
technique employed as a complement to other methods.

This research was carried out by Hiroyuki Yamase of WPI-MANA and his 
collaborators.

"Fermi Surface in La-Based Cuprate Superconductors from Compton Scattering 
Imaging"
Yamase, H., Sakurai, Y., Fujita, M. et al. Nat Commun 12, 2223 (2021)
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22229-6

MANA E-BULLETIN
https://www.nims.go.jp/mana/ebulletin/


Source: International Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (WPI-MANA), 
National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS)