Incoherent strange metal sharply bounded by a critical doping in Bi2212.
Su-Di ChenMakoto HashimotoYu HeDongjoon SongKe-Jun XuJun-Feng HeThomas Peter DevereauxHiroshi EisakiDong-Hui LuJan ZaanenZhi-Xun ShenPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
In normal metals, macroscopic properties are understood using the concept of quasiparticles. In the cuprate high-temperature superconductors, the metallic state above the highest transition temperature is anomalous and is known as the "strange metal." We studied this state using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. With increasing doping across a temperature-independent critical value p c ~ 0.19, we observed that near the Brillouin zone boundary, the strange metal, characterized by an incoherent spectral function, abruptly reconstructs into a more conventional metal with quasiparticles. Above the temperature of superconducting fluctuations, we found that the pseudogap also discontinuously collapses at the very same value of p c These observations suggest that the incoherent strange metal is a distinct state and a prerequisite for the pseudogap; such findings are incompatible with existing pseudogap quantum critical point scenarios.