| Literature DB >> 35322017 |
V Oliviero1, S Benhabib2,3, I Gilmutdinov1, B Vignolle4, L Drigo1,5, M Massoudzadegan1, M Leroux1, G L J A Rikken1, A Forget6, D Colson6, D Vignolles7, C Proust8.
Abstract
Multilayered cuprates possess not only the highest superconducting temperature transition but also offer a unique platform to study disorder-free CuO2 planes and the interplay between competing orders with superconductivity. Here, we study the underdoped trilayer cuprate HgBa2Ca2Cu3O8+δ and we report quantum oscillation and Hall effect measurements in magnetic field up to 88 T. A careful analysis of the complex spectra of quantum oscillations strongly supports the coexistence of an antiferromagnetic order in the inner plane and a charge order in the outer planes. The presence of an ordered antiferromagnetic metallic state that extends deep in the superconducting phase is a key ingredient that supports magnetically mediated pairing interaction in cuprates.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35322017 PMCID: PMC8943046 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-29134-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1QO data.
a Field dependence of the TDO frequency after the heterodyne circuit at low temperature in the monolayer Hg1201 (blue line) and in the tri-layer Hg1223 at different doping levels (black and red line). b Oscillatory part of the TDO signal after removing a smooth background (spline) from the data shown in panel a. c Discrete Fourier analysis of the oscillatory part of the TDO signal shown in panel b.
Fig. 2Lifshitz-Kosevich fits.
Field dependence of the TDO frequency in Hg1223 (p = 8%) at different temperatures (symbols). Solid lines correspond to the fits to the data using the Lifshitz-Kosevich theory plus a polynomial background in the field range 40 ≤ H ≤ 83 T and in the temperature range T = 1.4–4.2 K (see Supplementary Note 3 for details). The inset shows the Fourier analysis of the oscillatory part of the data at T = 1.4 K along with the contribution of F1 (blue), F2 (grey) and F3 (red), respectively. The green component corresponds to a frequency combination, which has been taken into account to improve the fits.
Sample family, T, doping p and QO frequency deduced from the discrete Fourier transform analysis.
| Family | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hg1223 | 64 K | 8.0% | 330 ± 30 T | 500 ± 20 T | 850 ± 20 T |
| Hg1223 | 74 K | 8.7% | 335 ± 20 T | 500 ± 20 T | 850 ± 20 T |
| Hg1201 | 74 K | 9.7% | × | × | 880 T |
Fig. 3Hall data.
Temperature dependence of the normal-state Hall coefficient R, measured at high fields, in Hg1223 (p = 8.8%, red squares) and in Hg1201 (p = 8%, blue circles adapted from ref. [18]). The Hall coefficient changes sign in Hg1201 while it remains positive (i.e. hole-like) down to the lowest temperature in Hg1223. Note that in Hg1223, as T → 0, R ≈ 6.5 mm3/C, corresponding to an effective carrier density p ≈ 8%. Error bars represent the noise generated by the 90 T coil (see Supplementary Note 4).
Fig. 4Sketch of the Fermi surface.
a Crystallographic structure of tri-layer Hg1223. We sketch the presence of AFM order in the IP (purple arrow) and charge order (orange wave) in the OPs. b Corresponding reconstructed Fermi surface in presence of AFM order in the IP leading to a hole pocket (purple, F2 QO frequency) and CO order in the OP leading to an electron pocket (orange, F3 QO frequency). Both pockets are located in the nodal region of the quarter of the first Brillouin zone. Magnetic breakdown tunnelling between the pockets leads to an additional frequency F1 ≈ F3 − F2.