Spectroscopic Studies of Quasiparticle Low-Energy Excitations in Cuprate and Iron-Based High-Temperature Superconductors
Nai-Chang Yeh

TL;DR
This review discusses low-energy excitations in cuprate and iron-based high-temperature superconductors, highlighting phenomenological models, similarities, differences, and implications for pairing mechanisms driven by electronic correlations.
Contribution
It provides a unified phenomenological framework for understanding low-energy excitations and pairing mechanisms in both cuprate and iron-based high-temperature superconductors.
Findings
Cuprates exhibit competing orders coexisting with superconductivity.
Iron-based superconductors are multi-band with two-gap superconductivity.
Both systems show strong antiferromagnetic correlations and unconventional pairing.
Abstract
Recent development in the physics of high-temperature superconductivity is reviewed, with special emphasis on the studies of the low-energy excitations of cuprate and iron-based superconductors. For cuprate superconductors, a phenomenology based on coexisting competing orders with superconductivity in the ground state of these doped Mott insulators is shown to provide a consistent account for a wide range of experimental findings. In the case of iron-based superconductors, studies of the low-energy excitations reveal interesting similarities and differences when compared with cuprate superconductors. In contrast to the single-band cuprate superconductivity with an insulating parent state, the ferrous superconductors are multi-band materials with a semi-metallic parent state and exhibit two-gap superconductivity when doped. On the other hand, both systems exhibit strong antiferromagnetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Iron-based superconductors research · Rare-earth and actinide compounds
