DETERMINATION OF THE CONDENSATE FROM OPTICAL TECHNIQUES IN UNCONVENTIONAL SUPERCONDUCTORS

Citation
Cc. Homes et al., DETERMINATION OF THE CONDENSATE FROM OPTICAL TECHNIQUES IN UNCONVENTIONAL SUPERCONDUCTORS, Physica. C, Superconductivity, 296(3-4), 1998, pp. 230-240
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Physics, Applied
ISSN journal
09214534
Volume
296
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
230 - 240
Database
ISI
SICI code
0921-4534(1998)296:3-4<230:DOTCFO>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
The optical properties of superconductors, in particular the real part s of the conductivity and the dielectric function, may he used to calc ulate the strength of the condensate. In systems where all the free ca rriers collapse into the condensate, this approach works well. However , in gapless systems, and in unconventional systems in which the super conducting energy gap is observed to have zeros at the Fermi surface. there is usually considerable amount of residual conductivity at low f requency. This is the case in many of the cuprate-based high-temperatu re superconductors. In particular. YBa2Cu3O7-delta is almost perfectly stoichiometric with little chemical disorder(delta approximate to 0), yet there is a. large amount of residual conductivity both in the cop per-oxygen planes as well as perpendicular to the planes for T much le ss than T-c, due to the presumed unconventional nature of the energy g ap. The assumption that the condensate dominates the optical response at low frequencies lends to optical estimates for the condensate which are too large. However, the microwave surface reactance depends only upon the condensate and is not affected by the presence of residual co nductivity (which affects the surface resistance), thus allowing an un ambiguous determination of the strength of the condensate. When optica l techniques are used in conjunction with microwave techniques. a more complete physical picture emerges. This problem is examined and resol ved for the oxygen 'overdoped' YBa2Cu3O6.99 material along the c axis. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.