Revisiting Quasiparticle Scattering Interference in High-Temperature Superconductors: The Problem of Narrow Peaks
Miguel Antonio Sulangi, Milan P. Allan, Jan Zaanen

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the interpretation of quasiparticle interference in high-temperature superconductors, revealing discrepancies between experimental observations and theoretical models, especially regarding peak sharpness and impurity effects.
Contribution
Introduces a flexible real-space Green's function simulation method to study disorder effects on QPI in cuprates, highlighting limitations of current theoretical models.
Findings
QPI peaks are sharper in experiments than in simulations.
Smooth disorder models fail to reproduce large-momentum scattering peaks.
Point-like impurity models approximate experimental QPI but imply unobserved impurity cores.
Abstract
We revisit the interpretation of quasiparticle scattering interference in cuprate high- superconductors. This phenomenon has been very successful in reconstructing the dispersions of d-wave Bogoliubov excitations, but the successful identification and interpretation of QPI in scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) experiments rely on theoretical results obtained for the case of isolated impurities. We introduce a highly flexible technique to simulate STS measurements by computing the local density of states using real-space Green's functions defined on two-dimensional lattices with as many as 100,000 sites. We focus on the following question: to what extent can the experimental results be reproduced when various forms of distributed disorder are present? We consider randomly distributed point-like impurities, smooth "Coulombic" disorder, and disorder arising from random on-site…
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