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      Spin-Gap Proximity Effect Mechanism of High Temperature Superconductivity

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          Abstract

          When holes are doped into an antiferromagnetic insulator they form a slowly fluctuating array of ``topological defects'' (metallic stripes) in which the motion of the holes exhibits a self-organized quasi one-dimensional electronic character. The accompanying lateral confinement of the intervening Mott-insulating regions induces a spin gap or pseudogap in the environment of the stripes. We present a theory of underdoped high temperature superconductors and show that there is a {\it local} separation of spin and charge, and that the mobile holes on an individual stripe acquire a spin gap via pair hopping between the stripe and its environment; i.e. via a magnetic analog of the usual superconducting proximity effect. In this way a high pairing scale without a large mass renormalization is established despite the strong Coulomb repulsion between the holes. Thus the {\it mechanism} of pairing is the generation of a spin gap in spatially-confined {\it Mott-insulating} regions of the material in the proximity of the metallic stripes. At non-vanishing stripe densities, Josephson coupling between stripes produces a dimensional crossover to a state with long-range superconducting phase coherence. This picture is established by obtaining exact and well-controlled approximate solutions of a model of a one-dimensional electron gas in an active environment. An extended discussion of the experimental evidence supporting the relevance of these results to the cuprate superconductors is given.

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          Correlated Electrons in High Temperature Superconductors

          Theoretical ideas and experimental results concerning high temperature superconductors are reviewed. Special emphasis is given to calculations carried out with the help of computers applied to models of strongly correlated electrons proposed to describe the two dimensional \({\rm Cu O_2}\) planes. The review also includes results using several analytical techniques. The one and three band Hubbard models, and the \({\rm t-J}\) model are discussed, and their behavior compared against experiments when available. Among the conclusions of the review, we found that some experimentally observed unusual properties of the cuprates have a natural explanation through Hubbard-like models. In particular abnormal features like the mid-infrared band of the optical conductivity \(\sigma(\omega)\), the new states observed in the gap in photoemission experiments, the behavior of the spin correlations with doping, and the presence of phase separation in the copper oxide superconductors may be explained, at least in part, by these models. Finally, the existence of superconductivity in Hubbard-like models is analyzed. Some aspects of the recently proposed ideas to describe the cuprates as having a \(\dx2y2\) superconducting condensate at low temperatures are discussed. Numerical results favor this scenario over others....(continues).
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            Superconductivity and the Quantum Hard-Core Dimer Gas

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              Topology of the resonating valence-bond state: Solitons and high-Tcsuperconductivity

                Author and article information

                Journal
                1996-10-10
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevB.56.6120
                cond-mat/9610094
                dc08f910-b90f-4d41-ad20-b3c11a50bc5c
                History
                Custom metadata
                Physical Review B56, 6120-6147 (1997)
                30 pages, 2 figures
                cond-mat.str-el

                Condensed matter
                Condensed matter

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