Possible mechanism of Cooper pairing in HTS cuprates
Avto Tavkhelidze

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel mechanism for Cooper pairing in high-temperature superconducting cuprates involving interlayer electron tunneling and correlated quantum states, explaining various experimental phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a new pairing mechanism based on interlayer tunneling and correlated quantum states, providing explanations for pseudogap, energy gaps, and other properties of HTS cuprates.
Findings
Calculated pseudogap matches experimental values for YBCO, Bi2212, Tl2212, Hg1212.
Model explains two energy gaps and two characteristic temperatures.
Mechanism accounts for isotope effects and Fermi surface features.
Abstract
In this study, the possible pairing mechanism based on attraction between electrons from adjacent CuO2 layers is proposed. Initially, each CuO2 layer was found to expand the Fermi sphere owing to ridged geometry. When the two layers are close enough for tunneling, it becomes energetically advantageous to form correlated quantum states (CQS), reducing the Fermi sphere volume. Cooper pairs, comprising inter-tunneling electrons, occupy the CQS. The image force is responsible for the electron-electron attraction. Energy exchange between the paired electrons happens through photons. Pair-binding energy and the corresponding effective mass vary in a wide range. At T>0, some heavy pairs do not condense. Such pairs are responsible for pseudogap. Light pairs get Bose condensed and are responsible for superconductivity. The proposed mechanism provides possible explanation of two energy gaps and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Magnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials
