Discovery of an electronic crystal in a cuprate Mott insulator
Mingu Kang, Charles Zhang, Enrico Schierle, Stephen McCoy, Jiarui Li,, Ronny Sutarto, Feizhou He, Andreas Suter, Thomas Prokscha, Zaher Salman,, Eugen Weschke, Shane Cybart, John Y. T. Wei, and Riccardo Comin

TL;DR
This study uncovers a pervasive charge crystal phase in lightly doped cuprates, bridging the Mott insulator and underdoped superconductor, revealing a fundamental electronic order in high-temperature superconductors.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of a charge crystal phase in lightly doped cuprates, linking it to charge-density-waves and highlighting its role in the electronic phase diagram.
Findings
Charge crystal order extends to the Mott insulator limit.
Charge order is connected to charge-density-waves in doped cuprates.
Coexistence of charge and spin order suggests commonality in cuprates.
Abstract
Copper oxide high temperature superconductors universally exhibit multiple forms of electronically ordered phases that break the native translational symmetry of the CuO2 planes. The interplay between these orders and the superconducting ground state, as well as how they arise through doping a Mott insulator, is essential to decode the mechanisms of high-temperature superconductivity. Over the years, various forms of electronic liquid crystal phases including charge/spin stripes and incommensurate charge-density-waves (CDWs) were found to emerge out of a correlated metallic ground state in underdoped cuprates. Early theoretical studies also predicted the emergence of a Coulomb-frustrated 'charge crystal' phase in the very lightly-doped, insulating limit of the CuO2 planes. Here, we use resonant X-ray scattering, electron transport, and muon spin rotation measurements to fully resolve…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Copper-based nanomaterials and applications
