Antiferromagnetic Spin Fluctuations and the Pseudogap in the Paramagnetic Phases of Quasi-Two-Dimensional Organic Superconductors
Eddy Yusuf, B. J. Powell, and Ross H. McKenzie

TL;DR
This paper analyzes NMR data of organic superconductors using a spin fluctuation model, revealing antiferromagnetic correlations and pseudogap phenomena, and proposes experiments to explore their connection to superconductivity.
Contribution
It applies the M-MMP spin fluctuation model to organic superconductors, identifies limitations near the Mott phase, and suggests pseudogap presence and new experiments to understand its role in superconductivity.
Findings
Antiferromagnetic correlations grow as temperature decreases.
Pseudogap likely opens below T_NMR in some materials.
NMR data inconsistent with long-range magnetic order in certain compounds.
Abstract
We give a quantitative analysis of the published results of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments for k-(ET)2X family of organic charge transfer salts by using the phenomenological spin fluctuation model of Moriya, and Millis, Monien and Pines (M-MMP). For temperatures above T_NMR ~ 50 K, the model gives a good quantitative description of the data for the paramagnetic metallic phase of several k-(ET)2X materials, with an antiferromagnetic correlation length which increases with decreasing temperature; growing to several lattice constants by T_NMR. It is shown that the fact that the dimensionless Korringa ratio is much larger than unity is inconsistent with a broad class of theoretical models (such as dynamical mean-field theory) which neglect spatial correlations and/or vertex corrections. For materials close to the Mott insulating phase, 1/T1, Ks, and K all decrease…
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