Algebraic charge liquids
read the original abstract
High temperature superconductivity emerges in the cuprate compounds upon changing the electron density of an insulator in which the electron spins are antiferromagnetically ordered. A key characteristic of the superconductor is that electrons can be extracted from them at zero energy only if their momenta take one of four specific values (the `nodal points'). A central enigma has been the evolution of the zero energy electrons in the metallic state between the antiferromagnet and the superconductor, and recent experiments yield apparently contradictory results. The oscillation of the resistance in this metal as a function of magnetic field indicate that the zero energy electrons carry momenta which lie on elliptical `Fermi pockets', while ejection of electrons by high intensity light indicates that the zero energy electrons have momenta only along arc-like regions. We present a theory of new states of matter, which we call `algebraic charge liquids', which arise naturally between the antiferromagnet and the superconductor, and reconcile these observations. Our theory also explains a puzzling dependence of the density of superconducting electrons on the total electron density, and makes a number of unique predictions for future experiments.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 3 Pith papers
-
Thermal SU(2) lattice gauge theory for intertwined orders and hole pockets in the cuprates
Monte Carlo study of thermal SU(2) gauge theory with Higgs boson reconciles Fermi arcs and p/8 hole pockets while describing intertwined orders and d-wave superconductivity at lower temperatures.
-
Lectures on insulating and conducting quantum spin liquids
The fractionalized Fermi liquid state obtained by doping quantum spin liquids resolves key experimental difficulties in cuprate pseudogap metals and d-wave superconductors.
-
Fractionalized Fermi liquids and the cuprate phase diagram
Reviews the FL* theory for cuprates using ancilla layer models and SU(2) gauge theories to explain pseudogap hole pockets of area p/8, Fermi arcs, and transitions to d-wave superconductivity and Fermi liquid behavior.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.