Publication | Closed Access
Atomic-Scale Sources and Mechanism of Nanoscale Electronic Disorder in Bi <sub>2</sub> Sr <sub>2</sub> CaCu <sub>2</sub> O <sub>8+δ</sub>
418
Citations
17
References
2005
Year
Superconducting MaterialEngineeringElectronic StructureSemiconductor NanostructuresDopant Atom DistributionsNanoelectronicsSuperconductivityQuantum MaterialsHigh Tc SuperconductorsNanoscale ScienceMaterials ScienceHigh-tc SuperconductivityCrystalline DefectsPhysicsNanoscale Electronic DisorderAtomic PhysicsOxygen Dopant AtomsSolid-state PhysicNanophysicsSpatial DensitiesHigh-temperature SuperconductivityApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsDisordered Quantum SystemAtomic-scale Sources
The randomness of dopant atom distributions in cuprate high-critical temperature superconductors has long been suspected to cause nanoscale electronic disorder. In the superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+delta, we identified populations of atomic-scale impurity states whose spatial densities follow closely those of the oxygen dopant atoms. We found that the impurity-state locations are strongly correlated with all manifestations of the nanoscale electronic disorder. This disorder occurs via an unanticipated mechanism exhibiting high-energy spectral weight shifts, with associated strong superconducting coherence peak suppression but very weak scattering of low-energy quasi-particles.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1