Universal features in the photoemission spectroscopy of high temperature superconductors
J. Zhao, U. Chatterjee, D. Ai, D.G. Hinks, H. Zheng, G. Gu, S., Rosenkranz, J.-P Castellan, H. Claus, M.R. Norman, M. Randeria, and J.C., Campuzano

TL;DR
This paper investigates the universality of electronic features in high-temperature superconductors using ARPES, revealing that some characteristics are universal while others depend on sample preparation and doping.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the two-gap behavior is not universal and depends on sample preparation, contrasting with other universal features like the pseudogap and Tc dome.
Findings
Two-gap behavior varies with sample preparation and doping.
Universal features include the pseudogap and Tc dependence on doping.
Well-defined excitations along diagonals are consistent across samples.
Abstract
The energy gap for electronic excitations is one of the most important characteristics of the superconducting state, as it directly refects the pairing of electrons. In the copper-oxide high temperature superconductors (HTSCs), a strongly anisotropic energy gap, which vanishes along high symmetry directions, is a clear manifestation of the d-wave symmetry of the pairing. There is, however, a dramatic change in the form of the gap anisotropy with reduced carrier concentration (underdoping). Although the vanishing of the gap along the diagonal to the square Cu-O bond directions is robust, the doping dependence of the large gap along the Cu-O directions suggests that its origin might be different from pairing. It is thus tempting to associate the large gap with a second order parameter distinct from superconductivity. We use angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) to show that…
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