Normal-state nodal electronic structure in underdoped high-Tc copper oxides
Suchitra E. Sebastian, N. Harrison, F. F. Balakirev, M. M. Altarawneh,, P. A. Goddard, Ruixing Liang, D. A. Bonn, W. N. Hardy, G. G. Lonzarich

TL;DR
This study uses quantum oscillation measurements to reveal that the normal state of underdoped high-Tc cuprates features electron-like Fermi pockets near the nodes, indicating a superlattice structure linked to charge order.
Contribution
It provides direct experimental evidence for a superlattice-induced Fermi surface near the nodes in the normal state of underdoped cuprates, supporting models with translational symmetry breaking.
Findings
Electron-like Fermi pockets near the nodes identified.
Evidence of a superlattice structure consistent with charge order.
Normal state characterized by a small, long-wavelength superlattice.
Abstract
An outstanding problem in the field of high-transition-temperature (high Tc) superconductivity is the identification of the normal state out of which superconductivity emerges in the mysterious underdoped regime. The normal state uncomplicated by thermal fluctuations is effectively accessed by the use of applied magnetic fields sufficiently strong to suppress long-range superconductivity at low temperatures. Proposals in which the normal ground state is characterised by small Fermi surface pockets that exist in the absence of symmetry breaking have been superseded by models based on the existence of a superlattice that breaks the translational symmetry of the underlying lattice. Recently, a charge superlattice model that positions a small electron-like Fermi pocket in the vicinity of the nodes (where the superconducting gap is minimum) has been proposed a replacement for the prevalent…
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