A short review of the recent progresses in the study of the cuprate superconductivity
Tao Li

TL;DR
This review summarizes recent advances in understanding cuprate superconductivity, highlighting the role of quantum criticality, the pseudogap phase, and the challenges of developing a universal theory beyond the Landau paradigm.
Contribution
It discusses new experimental insights into the pseudogap and strange metal phases, emphasizing the duality of local moments and itinerant electrons as a potential organizing principle.
Findings
Strange metal behavior linked to quantum critical fluctuations at the pseudogap end point.
Pseudogap exists without symmetry breaking, challenging traditional theories.
Quantum critical behavior in cuprates differs from heavy Fermion and iron-based systems.
Abstract
The last 15 years have witnessed important progresses in our understanding of the mechanism of superconductivity in the high- cuprates. There is now strong evidence that the strange metal behavior is induced by the quantum critical fluctuation at the pseudogap end point, where the Fermi surface changes its topology from hole-like to electron-like. However, experiments show that the quantum critical behavior in the high- cuprates is qualitatively different from that observed in the heavy Fermion systems and the iron-based superconductors, in both of which the quantum critical behavior can be attributed to the quantum phase transition toward a symmetry breaking phase. The fact that the pseudogap exists as a spectral gap without a corresponding symmetry breaking order, together with the fact that the strange metal behavior occurs as a quantum critical behavior without a…
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