Effects of non-magnetic defects in hole doped cuprates: exploration of the roles of the underlying electronic correlations
S. H. Naqib, R. S. Islam

TL;DR
This study investigates how non-magnetic defects affect superconductivity, charge transport, and magnetic properties in hole-doped cuprates, revealing insights into electronic correlations and stripe order effects.
Contribution
It provides new understanding of the role of non-magnetic defects in high-Tc cuprates and their interaction with electronic correlations and stripe order phenomena.
Findings
Zn suppresses Tc most effectively away from p ~ 0.125
Pseudogap energy scale remains insensitive to Zn content
Zn becomes less effective in degrading Tc near the 1/8th anomaly
Abstract
The effects of non-magnetic iso-valent defects inside the CuO2 plane(s) on superconducting transition temperature, Tc, dc charge transport, and the bulk magnetic susceptibility, \c{hi}(T), were investigated for the YBa2(Cu1-yZny)3O7-d (Zn-YBCO) and La2-xSrxCu1-yZnyO4 (Zn-LSCO) superconductors over a wide range of hole concentrations, p, and Zn contents (y) in the CuO2 plane(s). From the analysis of the \c{hi}(T, y) data, the pseudogap energy scale, {\epsilon}g, was found to be almost independent of the defect content at a given value of p. The Zn induced rate of suppression of Tc, dTc(p)/dy, was found to be strongly p-dependent and showed a systematic variation with hole concentration, except in the vicinity of p ~ 0.125, i.e., near the so-called 1/8th anomaly where the charge and spin stripe orderings are at their strongest in various families of hole doped cuprates. Near p ~ 0.125,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Magnetic properties of thin films · Theoretical and Computational Physics
