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18 - High- Tc superconductivity with polarons and bipolarons: an approach from the insulating states

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2009

S. Aubry
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Léon Brillouin (CEA-CNRS), CE Saclay, 91191-Gif-sur-Yvette Cédex, France
E. K. H. Salje
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
A. S. Alexandrov
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
W. Y. Liang
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

Abstract

We review a series of exact, analytical and numerical results obtained on the adiabatic Holstein–Hubbard model, many of which are new and non-trivial. We study next the role of the quantum lattice fluctuations that were initially neglected. The possibility of having high-Tc bipolaronic superconductors is analysed on the basis of these results.

We suggest that models that involve only electron–phonon coupling are very unlikely to produce bipolaronic superconductivity, which is prevented by the spatial ordering of the bipolarons associated with a lattice instability. This is due to a very large effective mass of the bipolarons that can be related to the large Peierls–Nabarro energy barrier required to move these bipolarons through the lattice in the adiabatic limit.

We conjecture that high-Tc superconductivity originates specifically from the exceptionally well-balanced competition between electron–phonon coupling and electron–electron repulsion. In the restricted region in which, within the mean field approach, the energy of a bipolaron is close to those of two polarons, a new type of electron pairing occurs by formation of pairs of polarons in the spin singlet state. Such a polaron pair, called a spin resonant bipolaron (SRB), is not the standard bipolaron (both could exist in the adiabatic case). Its Peierls–Nabarro energy barrier can be sharply depressed, almost to zero. As a result of quantum lattice fluctuations, its tunnelling energy is sharply enhanced. Then, superconductivity could persist for a relatively large electron–phonon coupling, with an unusually large critical temperature as a Bose condensate of SRBs before becoming, at larger coupling and in any case, an insulating spin–Peierls polaronic phase.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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