Visualizing the Zhang-Rice singlet, molecular orbitals and pair formation in cuprate
Shusen Ye, Jianfa Zhao, Zhiheng Yao, Sixuan Chen, Zehao Dong, Xintong, Li, Luchuan Shi, Qingqing Liu, Changqing Jin, Yayu Wang

TL;DR
This study visualizes the electronic states of doped holes in cuprates at atomic scale, revealing how molecular orbitals and Zhang-Rice singlets contribute to pairing and superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides direct atomic-scale imaging of doped holes and molecular orbitals in cuprates, linking local electronic structures to superconductivity mechanisms.
Findings
Single doped holes form in-gap states with a clover-shaped distribution.
Doped holes develop delocalized molecular orbitals with stripe and ladder patterns.
Molecular orbitals proliferate with doping, forming dense plaquettes.
Abstract
The parent compound of cuprates is a charge-transfer-type Mott insulator with strong hybridization between the Cu and O orbitals. A key question concerning the pairing mechanism is the behavior of doped holes in the antiferromagnetic (AF) Mott insulator background, which is a prototypical quantum many-body problem. It was proposed that doped hole on the O site tends to form a singlet, known as Zhang-Rice singlet (ZRS), with the unpaired Cu spin. But experimentally little is known about the properties of a single hole and the interplay between them that leads to superconductivity. Here we use scanning tunneling microscopy to visualize the electronic states in hole-doped , aiming to establish the atomic-scale local basis for pair formation. A single doped hole is shown to have an in-gap state and a clover-shaped spatial distribution that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Theoretical and Computational Physics
