• Phillips group exactly solves experiment

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Jul 29 21:30:30 2020
    Phillips group exactly solves experimental puzzle in high temperature superconductivity
    Cooper pairing and wave function for superconducting state in doped Mott insulators

    Date:
    July 29, 2020
    Source:
    University of Illinois Grainger College of Engineering
    Summary:
    A team of theoretical physicists has for the first time exactly
    solved a representative model of the cuprate problem, the 1992
    Hatsugai-Kohmoto (HK) model of a doped Mott insulator.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Forty-five years after superconductivity was first discovered in
    metals, the physics giving rise to it was finally explained in
    1957 at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory of superconductivity.


    ========================================================================== Thirty years after that benchmark achievement, a new mystery confronted condensed matter physicists: the discovery in 1987 of copper-oxide or
    high- temperature superconductors. Now commonly known as the cuprates,
    this new class of materials demonstrated physics that fell squarely
    outside of BCS theory. The cuprates are insulators at room temperature,
    but transition to a superconducting phase at a much higher critical
    temperature than traditional BCS superconductors. (The cuprates' critical temperature can be as high as 170 Kelvin -- that's -153.67?F -- as opposed
    to the much lower critical temperature of 4 Kelvin -- or -452.47?F --
    for mercury, a BCS superconductor.) The discovery of high-temperature superconductors, now more than 30 years ago, seemed to promise that a
    host of new technologies were on the horizon. After all, the cuprates' superconducting phase can be reached using liquid nitrogen as a coolant, instead of the far costlier and rare liquid helium required to cool BCS superconductors. But until the unusual and unexpected superconducting
    behavior of these insulators can be theoretically explained, that promise remains largely unfulfilled.

    An outpouring of both experimental and theoretical physics research has
    sought to uncover a satisfactory explanation for superconductivity in
    the cuprates.

    But today, this remains perhaps the most pressing unsolved question in condensed matter physics.

    Now a team of theoretical physicists at the Institute for Condensed
    Matter Theory (ICMT) in the Department of Physics at the University of
    Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, led by Illinois Physics Professor Philip Phillips, has for the first time exactly solved a representative model
    of the cuprate problem, the 1992 Hatsugai-Kohmoto (HK) model of a doped
    Mott insulator.

    The team has published its findings online in the journal Nature Physics
    on July 27, 2020.



    ========================================================================== "Aside from the obvious difference in superconducting temperatures,
    the cuprates start off their lives as Mott insulators, in which the
    electrons do not move independently as in a metal, but rather are strongly interacting," explains Phillips. "It is the strong interactions that
    make them insulate so well." In their research, Phillips' team solves
    exactly the analog of the "Cooper pairing" problem from BCS theory,
    but now for a doped Mott insulator.

    What is "Cooper pairing"? Leon Cooper demonstrated this key element of
    BCS theory: the normal state of a traditional superconducting metal is
    unstable to an attractive interaction between pairs of electrons. At
    a BCS superconductor's critical temperature, Cooper pairs of electrons
    travel without resistance through the metal -- this is superconductivity!
    "This is the first paper to show exactly that a Cooper instability exists
    in even a toy model of a doped Mott insulator," notes Phillips. "From
    this we show that superconductivity exists and that the properties differ drastically from the standard BCS theory. This problem had proven so
    difficult, only numerical or suggestive phenomenology was possible before
    our work." Phillips credits ICMT post-doctoral Fellow Edwin Huang with
    writing the analogue of the BCS wave function for the superconducting
    state, for the Mott problem.



    ==========================================================================
    "The wave function is the key thing that you have to have to say a
    problem is solved," Phillips says. "John Robert Schrieffer's wave function turned out to be the computational workhorse of the whole BCS theory. All
    the calculations were done with it. For interacting electron problems,
    it is notoriously difficult to write a wave function. In fact, so far
    only two wave functions have been computed that describe interacting
    states of matter, one by Robert Laughlin in the fractional quantum Hall
    effect, and the other by Schrieffer in the context of BCS theory. So the
    fact that Edwin was able to do this for this problem is quite a feat."
    Asked why the cuprates have proven such a mystery to physicists, Phillips explains, "In fact, it is the strong interactions in the Mott state
    that has prevented a solution to the problem of superconductivity in
    the cuprates. It has been difficult even to demonstrate the analogue
    of Cooper's pairing problem in any model of a doped Mott insulator."
    Huang's Mott insulator wave function further enabled Phillips, Huang, and physics graduate student Luke Yeo to solve a key experimental puzzle in
    the cuprates, known as "the color change." Unlike metals, the cuprates
    exhibit an enhanced absorption of radiation at low energies with a
    concomitant decrease in absorption at high energies. Phillips' team has
    shown that this behavior arises from the remnants of what Phillips calls
    "Mott physics" or "Mottness" in the superconducting state.

    Mottness is a term coined by Phillips to encapsulate certain collective properties of Mott insulators, first predicted shortly after World War
    II by British physicist and Nobel laureate Nevill Francis Mott.

    In addition, the researchers have shown that the superfluid density,
    which has been observed to be suppressed in the cuprates relative to its
    value in metals, is also a direct consequence of the material's Mottness.

    Further, Phillips' team has gone beyond the Cooper problem to demonstrate
    that the model has superconducting properties that lie outside that of
    BCS theory.

    "For example," Phillips explains, "the ratio of the transition temperature
    to the energy gap in the superconducting state vastly exceeds that in the
    BCS theory. In addition, our work shows that the elementary excitations
    in the superconducting state also lie outside the BCS paradigm as they
    arise from the wide range of energy scales intrinsic to the Mott state."
    This research was funded by the National Science Foundation's Division
    of Materials Research and by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation's
    Emergent Phenomena in Quantum Systems (EPiQS) Initiative. The findings presented are those of the researchers, and not necessarily those of
    the funding agencies.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Illinois_Grainger_College_of_Engineering.

    Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Philip W. Phillips, Luke Yeo, Edwin W. Huang. Exact theory for
    superconductivity in a doped Mott insulator. Nature Physics, 2020;
    DOI: 10.1038/s41567-020-0988-4 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200729114754.htm

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