Imaging the impact on cuprate superconductivity of varying the inter-atomic distances within individual crystal unit-cells
J.A. Slezak, Jinho Lee, M. Wang, K. McElroy, K. Fujita, B. M., Andersen, P. J.Hirschfeld, H. Eisaki, S. Uchida, J.C. Davis

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that variations in inter-atomic distances within crystal unit cells, especially the apical oxygen to copper distance, significantly influence the superconducting energy gap in cuprates, revealing a strong out-of-plane effect.
Contribution
The paper provides direct experimental evidence linking inter-atomic distance variations within unit cells to changes in superconducting properties in cuprates.
Findings
A 9% variation in the superconducting gap correlated with structural modulations.
Anti-correlation between the energy gap and apical oxygen distance.
Dopant-induced displacements likely affect superconductivity through out-of-plane structural changes.
Abstract
Many theoretical models of high temperature superconductivity focus only on the doping dependence of the CuO2 plane electronic structure. But such models are manifestly insufficient to explain the strong variations in superconducting critical temperature Tc among cuprates which have identical hole-density but are crystallographically different outside the CuO2 plane. A key challenge, therefore, has been to identify a predominant out-of-plane influence controlling the superconductivity - with much attention focusing on the distance between the apical oxygen and the planar copper atom. Here we report direct determination of how variations of inter-atomic distances within individual crystalline unit cells, affect the superconducting energy-gap maximum of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8. In this material, quasi-periodic variations of unit cell geometry occur in the form of a bulk crystalline…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
