Towards an ab initio theory of high-temperature superconductors: a study of multilayer cuprates
Benjamin Bacq-Labreuil, Benjamin Lacasse, Andr\'e-Marie S. Tremblay,, David S\'en\'echal, Kristjan Haule

TL;DR
This paper advances a first-principles approach combining dynamical mean-field theory and density functional theory to predict material-specific properties of multilayer cuprate high-temperature superconductors, explaining key experimental features.
Contribution
It introduces an ab initio framework for studying multilayer cuprates, linking microscopic parameters to superconducting properties and material-specific behaviors.
Findings
Maximum Tc explained by charge-transfer gap, superexchange, and doping
Identifies a minimal doping threshold for superconductivity
Captures experimental phenomena like Fermi arcs, charge redistribution, and pseudogap
Abstract
Significant progress towards a theory of high-temperature superconductivity in cuprates has been achieved via the study of effective one- and three-band Hubbard models. Nevertheless, material-specific predictions, while essential for constructing a comprehensive theory, remain challenging due to the complex relationship between real materials and the parameters of the effective models. By combining cluster dynamical mean-field theory and density functional theory in a charge-self-consistent manner, here we show that the goal of material-specific predictions for high-temperature superconductors from first principles is within reach. We take on the challenge of explaining the remarkable physics of multilayer cuprates by focusing on the two representative CaCuOCl and HgBaCaCuO families. We shed light on the microscopic origin of many…
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