Microscopic theory of pseudogap phenomena and unconventional Bose-liquid superconductivity and superfluidity in high-$T_c$ cuprates and other systems
S. Dzhumanov

TL;DR
This paper develops a microscopic theory explaining pseudogap phenomena and Bose-liquid superconductivity in high-$T_c$ cuprates, emphasizing the role of fermion attraction energy and bosonic Cooper pairs forming above $T_c$.
Contribution
It introduces a unified microscopic framework for pseudogap and unconventional Bose-liquid superconductivity, applicable to high-$T_c$ cuprates and other exotic systems, based on bosonic Cooper pairs.
Findings
High-$T_c$ cuprates are bosonic superconductors with pseudogap phases.
Superfluid transition is neither BCS-like nor standard Bose-Einstein condensation.
Mean-field theory aligns well with experimental properties of high-$T_c$ cuprates.
Abstract
A consistent microscopic theory of pseudogap phenomena and novel Bose-liquid superconductivity (superfluidity) is presented, based on the fact that in high- cuprates and related systems the energy of the effective attraction between fermions is comparable with their Fermi energy and the bosonic Cooper pairs are formed above and then a part of such Cooper pairs condense into a Bose superfluid at . High- cuprates and other systems with low Fermi energies () are bosonic superconductors/superfluids and exhibit pseudogap phases above , -like superconducting transition at and Bose-liquid superconductivity below . The relevant charge carriers in high- cuprates are polarons which are bound into bosonic Cooper pairs above . Polaronic and pseudogap effects weaken with increasing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Superconducting Materials and Applications
