Unified intermediate coupling description of the pseudogap and the strange metal phases of cuprates
Abstract
A one band Hubbard model with intermediate coupling is shown to describe the two most important unusual features of a normal state: linear resistivity strange metal and the pseudogap. Both the spectroscopic and transport properties of the cuprates are considered on the same footing by employing a relatively simple postgaussian approximation valid for the intermediate couplings U/t=1.5-4 in relevant temperatures T>100 K. In the doping range \ p=0.1-0.3, the value of U is smaller than that in the parent material. For a smaller doping, especially in the Mott insulator phase, the coupling is large compared to the effective tight binding scale and a different method is required. This scenario provides an alternative to the paradigm that the coupling should be strong, say U/t>6, in order to describe the strange metal. We argue that to obtain phenomenologically acceptable underdoped normal state characteristics like T , pseudogap values, and spectral weight distribution, a large value of U is detrimental. Surprisingly the resistivity in the above temperature range is linear =0+α m e2n T with the "Planckian" coefficient α of order one.
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