Spins, Stripes, and Superconductivity in Hole-Doped Cuprates
John M. Tranquada

TL;DR
This paper reviews the role of spin correlations, stripe order, and their coexistence with superconductivity in hole-doped cuprates, highlighting experimental insights from neutron scattering and transport studies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of experimental techniques and findings on spin and charge stripe order and their relationship with high-temperature superconductivity in cuprates.
Findings
Antiferromagnetic spin correlations persist in cuprates.
Stripe order coexists with quasi-two-dimensional superconductivity.
Frustrated phase order occurs between layers in stripe-ordered systems.
Abstract
One of the major themes in correlated electron physics over the last quarter century has been the problem of high-temperature superconductivity in hole-doped copper-oxide compounds. Fundamental to this problem is the competition between antiferromagnetic spin correlations, a symptom of strong Coulomb interactions, and the kinetic energy of the doped carriers, which favors delocalization. After discussing some of the early challenges in the field, I describe the experimental picture provided by a variety of spectroscopic and transport techniques. Then I turn to the technique of neutron scattering, and discuss how it is used to determine spin correlations, especially in model systems of quantum magnetism. Neutron scattering and complementary techniques have determined the extent to which antiferromagnetic spin correlations survive in the cuprate superconductors. One experimental case…
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