Pairing, pair-breaking, and their roles in setting the Tc of cuprate high temperature superconductors

Abstract

The key ingredients in any superconductor are the Cooper pairs, in which two electrons combine to form a composite boson. In all conventional superconductors the pairing strength alone sets the majority of the physical properties including the superconducting transition temperature Tc. In the cuprate high temperature superconductors, no such link has yet been found between the pairing interactions and Tc. Using a new variant of photoelectron spectroscopy we measure both the pair-forming () and a self energy/pair-breaking term (s) as a function of sample type and sample temperature, and we make the measurements over a wide range of doping and temperatures within and outside of the pseudogap/competing order doping regimes. In all cases we find that Tc is approximately set by a crossover between the pair-forming strength and 3 times the self-energy term s - a new paradigm for superconductivity. In addition to departing from conventional superconductivity in which the pairing alone sets Tc, these results indicate the zero-order importance of the near-nodal self-energy effects compared to competing order/pseudogap effects.

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