Abstract
The intrinsic mechanisms of the unusual metallic transports of three types of relevant charge carriers (large polarons, excited (dissociated) polaronic components of bosonic Cooper pairs and bosonic Cooper pairs themselves) along the CuO2 layers of high-Tc cuprates are identified and the new features of metallic conductivity in the CuO2 layers (i.e. ab -planes) of underdoped and optimally doped cuprates are explained. The in-plane conductivity of high-Tc cuprates is associated with the metallic transports of such charge carriers at their scattering by lattice vibrations in thin CuO2 layers. The proposed charge transport theory in high-Tc cuprates allows to explain consistently the distinctive features of metallic conductivity and the puzzling experimental data on the temperature dependences of their in-plane resistivity pab. In underdoped and optimally doped cuprates the linear temperature dependence of pab(T) above the pseudogap formation temperature T∗ is associated with the scattering of polaronic carriers at acoustic and optical phonons, while the different (upward and downward) deviations from the linearity in pab(T) below T∗ are caused by the pseudogap effect on the conductivity of the excited Fermi components of bosonic Cooper pairs and by the dominating conductivity of bosonic Cooper pairs themselves in the normal state of these high-Tc materials.
Highlights
Underdoped and optimally doped copper-oxide high-Tc superconductors exhibit distinctly different pseudogap features in the normal state, which cannot be explained within the framework of the existing theories based on the different non-standard models [1, 2]
In underdoped and optimally doped cuprates the linear temperature dependence of ρab(T) above the pseudogap formation temperature T∗ is associated with the scattering of polaronic carriers at acoustic and optical phonons, while the different deviations from the linearity in ρab(T) below T∗ are caused by the pseudogap effect on the conductivity of the excited Fermi components of bosonic Cooper pairs and by the dominating conductivity of bosonic Cooper pairs themselves in the normal state of these high-Tc materials
We show that the conductivity of underdoped and optimally doped cuprates along CuO2 layers above Tc is associated with the metallic transports of large polarons, excited Fermi components of polaronic Cooper pairs and very bosonic
Summary
The intrinsic mechanisms of the unusual metallic transports of three types of relevant charge carriers (large polarons, excited (dissociated) polaronic components of bosonic Cooper pairs and bosonic Cooper pairs themselves) along the CuO2 layers of high-Tc cuprates are identified and the new features of metallic conductivity in the CuO2 layers (i.e. ab -planes) of underdoped and optimally doped cuprates are explained. In underdoped and optimally doped cuprates the linear temperature dependence of ρab(T) above the pseudogap formation temperature T∗ is associated with the scattering of polaronic carriers at acoustic and optical phonons, while the different (upward and downward) deviations from the linearity in ρab(T) below T∗ are caused by the pseudogap effect on the conductivity of the excited Fermi components of bosonic Cooper pairs and by the dominating conductivity of bosonic Cooper pairs themselves in the normal state of these high-Tc materials.
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More From: Eurasian Journal of Physics and Functional Materials
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