Theoretical understanding of correlation between magnetic phase transition and the superconducting dome in high-Tc cuprates
Abstract
Many issues concerning the origin of high-temperature superconductivity (HTS) are still under debate. For example, how the magnetic order varies with doping and its relationship with the superconducting temperature (Tc); and why Tc always peaks near the quantum critical point. In this paper, taking hole-doped La2CuO4 as a classical example, we employ the first-principles band structure and total energy calculations with Monte Carlo simulations to explore how the symmetry-breaking magnetic ground state evolves with hole doping and the origin of a dome-shaped superconductivity region in the phase diagram. We demonstrate that the local antiferromagnetic order and doping play key roles in determining the electron-phonon coupling, thus Tc. Initially, the La2CuO4 possesses a checkerboard local antiferromagnetic ground state. As the hole doping increases, Tc increases with the enhanced electron-phonon coupling strength. But as the doping increases further, the strength of the antiferromagnetic interaction weakens and spin fluctuation increases. At the critical doping level, a magnetic phase transition occurs that reduces the local antiferromagnetism-assisted electron-phonon coupling, thus diminishing the Tc. The superconductivity disappears in the heavily overdoped region when the ferromagnetic order dominates. These observations could account for why cuprates have a dome-shaped superconductivity region in the phase diagram. Our study, thus, contributes to a fundamental understanding of the correlation between doping, local magnetic order, and superconductivity of HTS.
- Publication:
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Science China Physics, Mechanics, and Astronomy
- Pub Date:
- February 2024
- DOI:
- 10.1007/s11433-023-2240-0
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2303.15018
- Bibcode:
- 2024SCPMA..6727412Z
- Keywords:
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- high-temperature superconductivity;
- antiferromagnetic order;
- electron-phonon coupling;
- doping effect;
- cuprates;
- Condensed Matter - Superconductivity
- E-Print:
- 14 pages, 3 figures in the main text