Generalizing the Cooper-Pair Instability to Doped Mott Insulators
Abstract
Copper oxides become superconductors rapidly upon doping with electron holes, suggesting a fundamental pairing instability. The Cooper mechanism explains normal superconductivity as an instability of a fermi-liquid state, but high-temperature superconductors derive from a Mott-insulator normal state, not a fermi liquid. We show that precocity to pair condensation with doping is a natural property of competing antiferromagnetism and d-wave superconductivity on a singly-occupied lattice, thus generalizing the Cooper instability to doped Mott insulators, with significant implications for the high-temperature superconducting mechanism.
- Publication:
-
arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- October 2008
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.0810.3862
- arXiv:
- arXiv:0810.3862
- Bibcode:
- 2008arXiv0810.3862G
- Keywords:
-
- Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons;
- Condensed Matter - Superconductivity
- E-Print:
- 4 pages, 1 figure