Dominant role of the Cu---O charge-transfer energy, electronic polarizability and associated factors in the superconductivity of cuprates


Autoria(s): Rao, CNR; Ramasesha, S; Sarma , DD; Santra, AK
Data(s)

01/03/1991

Resumo

Although it is believed that there is strong hybridization between the Cu(3d) and O(2p) orbitals in the layered cuprates and that the parent compounds such as La2CuO4 are charge-transfer gap insulators, very few models consider the Cu---O charge-transfer energy, Δ, or the hybridization strength, tpd, to be the important factors responsible for the superconductivity of these materials. Based on the crucial experimental observation that the relative intensity of the features in Cu(2p) photoemission of several families of cuprates varies systematically with the hole concentration, nh, we have been able to show that both these properties vary smoothly with Δ /tpd. More importantly, we show that the electronic polarizability of the CuO2 sheets, α , is sufficiently large to favour hole pairing and that the value α also depends on Δ/tpd. Both nh and α increase smoothly with decreasing Δ /tpd. Considering that the maximum Tc in the various cuprate families containing the same number of CuO2 sheets occurs around the same nh value (e.g., nh≈ 0.2 in cuprates with two CuO2 sheets). The present study demonstrates how Δ /tpd, α and such chemical bonding characteristics have an important bearing on the superconducting properties of the cuprates.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/33747/1/DOMINANT_ROLE_OF_THE_Cu-O_CHARGE-TRANSFER.pdf

Rao, CNR and Ramasesha, S and Sarma , DD and Santra, AK (1991) Dominant role of the Cu---O charge-transfer energy, electronic polarizability and associated factors in the superconductivity of cuprates. In: Solid State Communications, 77 (9). pp. 709-711.

Publicador

Elsevier science

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(91)90774-P

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/33747/

Palavras-Chave #Solid State & Structural Chemistry Unit
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed