Phase Competition and Anomalous Thermal Evolution in High-Temperature Superconductors
Zuo-Dong Yu, Yuan Zhou, Wei-Guo Yin, Hai-Qing Lin, and Chang-De Gong

TL;DR
This paper investigates the complex interplay between competing orders in high-temperature superconductors, explaining anomalous thermal behaviors and phase diagram features through theoretical models and experimental agreement.
Contribution
It provides a unified theoretical framework to understand the back-bending of the pseudogap temperature and the revised phase diagram in cuprates, highlighting the role of weak to moderate competition between orders.
Findings
Back-bending of $T^*$ explained by competition models.
Qualitative agreement with quasiparticle gap and Raman response experiments.
Revised phase diagram likely applicable to high-temperature superconductors.
Abstract
The interplay of competing orders is relevant to high-temperature superconductivity known to emerge upon suppression of a parent antiferromagnetic order typically via charge doping. How such interplay evolves at low temperature---in particular at what doping level the zero-temperature quantum critical point (QCP) is located---is still elusive because it is masked by the superconducting state. The QCP had long been believed to follow a smooth extrapolation of the characteristic temperature for the strange normal state well above the superconducting transition temperature. However, recently the within the superconducting dome was reported to unexpectedly exhibit back-bending likely in the cuprate BiSrCaCuO. Here we show that the original and revised phase diagrams can be understood in terms of weak and moderate competitions, respectively, between…
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