Two-band Conduction and Nesting Instabilities in Superconducting Ba$_2$CuO$_{3+\delta}$: a First Principles Study
Hyo-Sun Jin, W. E. Pickett, and K.-W. Lee

TL;DR
This study uses first principles calculations to explore the electronic, magnetic, and structural properties of Ba$_2$CuO$_{3+ ext{δ}}$, revealing two-band physics, nesting instabilities, and the effects of oxygen ordering on its high-temperature superconductivity.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed first-principles analysis of Ba$_2$CuO$_{3+ ext{δ}}$, highlighting the role of two-band interactions and nesting instabilities in its superconducting behavior.
Findings
Identification of 1D and 2D nesting instabilities in Fermi surfaces.
Discovery of a preferred bilayer structure with bridging oxygen in the superconducting phase.
Observation of two-band physics involved in the pairing mechanism.
Abstract
First principles investigations of the high temperature superconducting system BaCuO, recently discovered at at K, are applied to demonstrate the effects of oxygen ordering on the electronic and magnetic properties. The observed `highly over-doped' superconducting phase displays stretched Cu-planar oxygen O distances and anomalously shortened Cu-apical O separations compared with other cuprates. The stoichiometric system , with its strongly one-dimensional (1D) Cu-O chain structure, when nonmagnetic shows 1D Fermi surfaces that lead, within density functional theory, to antiferromagnetic Cu-O chains (a spin-Peierls instability). Accounting for 1D fluctuations and small interchain coupling according to the theory of Schulz indicates this system, like SrCuO, is near the 1D…
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