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Emergent normal fluid in the superconducting ground state of overdoped cuprates.

Shusen YeMiao XuHongtao YanZi-Xiang LiChangwei ZouXintong LiZhenqi HaoChaohui YinYiwen ChenXingjiang ZhouDung-Hai LeeYayu Wang
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
The microscopic mechanism for the disappearance of superconductivity in overdoped cuprates is still under heated debate. Here we use scanning tunneling spectroscopy to investigate the evolution of quasiparticle interference phenomenon in Bi 2 Sr 2 CuO 6+δ over a wide range of hole densities. We find that when the system enters the overdoped regime, a peculiar quasiparticle interference wavevector with arc-like pattern starts to emerge even at zero bias, and its intensity grows with increasing doping level. Its energy dispersion is incompatible with the octet model for d-wave superconductivity, but is highly consistent with the scattering interference of gapless normal carriers. The gapless quasiparticles are mainly located near the antinodes and are independent of temperature, consistent with the disorder scattering mechanism. We propose that a branch of normal fluid emerges from the pair-breaking scattering between flat antinodal bands in the quantum ground state, which is the primary cause for the reduction of superfluid density and suppression of superconductivity in overdoped cuprates.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • monte carlo
  • molecular dynamics
  • high intensity
  • mass spectrometry
  • solid state
  • energy transfer