The route to high temperature superconductivity in transition metal oxides
Annette Bussmann-Holder, K. Alex M\"uller

TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical and scientific development of high temperature superconductivity in transition metal oxides, focusing on perovskite structures like SrTiO3 and LaAlO3, and discusses experimental insights into their properties.
Contribution
It provides detailed microscopic investigations of local properties in perovskite oxides and links these findings to the pursuit of high temperature superconductivity.
Findings
Identification of the order parameter of structural instability.
Superconductivity observed in Nb-doped SrTiO3 at 1.2K.
First experimental evidence of two-gap superconductivity in doped perovskites.
Abstract
The discovery of high temperature superconductivity in cuprates was possible only through an intimate knowledge of perovskite oxides which have been synthesized and characterized for decades at the IBM in the Z\"urich laboratoty. Especially SrTiO3 and LaAlO3 have been in the focus at IBM as was presented in Volume 1 of a series [1]. Probably for the first time detailed microscopic investigations of the local properties of these compounds have been obtained by studying by means of EPR the surroundings of transition metal impurities in these materials. These experiments enabled the identification of the order parameter of the structural instability observed in these oxides. However, the idea to search for superconductivity came later motivated by theoretical considerations that metallic hydrogen could become superconducting at high temperatures. Since SrTiO3 is an insulator it was thought…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectronic and Structural Properties of Oxides · Magnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
