Evolution of Superconductivity in Electron-Doped Cuprates: Magneto-Raman Spectroscopy
M. M. Qazilbash, A. Koitzsch, B. S. Dennis, A. Gozar, Hamza Balci, C., A. Kendziora, R. L. Greene, and G. Blumberg

TL;DR
This study uses magneto-Raman spectroscopy to analyze the evolution of superconductivity in electron-doped cuprates, revealing that hole-like carriers primarily drive superconductivity and highlighting the role of phase fluctuations and magnetic field effects.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the pairing mechanisms and the role of coherent quasiparticles in electron-doped cuprates through comprehensive Raman spectroscopy analysis.
Findings
Superconductivity mainly governed by hole-like coherent quasiparticles near (, ) regions.
Presence of an in-gap collective mode at 4.5 k_B T_c in underdoped samples.
Magnetic field suppresses the SC gap linearly at small fields.
Abstract
The electron-doped cuprates Pr_{2-x}Ce_xCuO_4 and Nd_{2-x}Ce_xCuO_4 have been studied by electronic Raman spectroscopy across the entire region of the superconducting (SC) phase diagram. The SC pairing strength is found to be consistent with a weak-coupling regime except in the under-doped region where we observe an in-gap collective mode at 4.5 k_{B}T_c while the maximum amplitude of the SC gap is ~8 k_{B}T_{c}. In the normal state, doped carriers divide into coherent quasi-particles (QPs) and carriers that remain incoherent. The coherent QPs mainly reside in the vicinity of (\pi/2, \pi/2) regions of the Brillouin zone (BZ). We find that only coherent QPs contribute to the superfluid density in the B_{2g} channel. The persistence of SC coherence peaks in the B_{2g} channel for all dopings implies that superconductivity is mainly governed by interactions between the hole-like coherent…
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