Electron-phonon coupling in SrTi$_{1-x}$Nb$_{x}$O$_{3}$
ORAL
Abstract
One of the major questions in the physics of high temperature is, to what extent electron-phonon coupling is important for the transport anomalies and for the superconductivity itself. One of the difficulties in addressing this issue for the cuprates, is the complexity of these materials, which are doped Mott-insulators, anti-ferromagnetic, striped, etcetera. In order to separate out the electron-phonon coupling we have studied the perovskite SrTi$_{1-x}$Nb$_{x}$O$_{3}$ with 0.0002 $<$ x $<$ 0.02. The lowest unoccupied bands of pristine SrTiO$_{3 }$are Ti 3d bands of t$_{2g}$ character, which become occupied with electrons upon substituting Nb for Ti. Here we report THz, infrared and optical spectra, DC resistivity and Hall effect. The infrared spectra at 7 K reveal a very narrow (less than 2 meV) Drude peak, the spectral weight of which reveals a strong mass-enhancement (m*/m$\sim $10) at the lowest carrier concentration, which diminishes gradually to m*/m$\sim $2 as we increase the carrier concentration. The mass enhancement, the doping dependence thereof, and several other features in the infrared spectra, indicate that electron-phonon coupling is strong. The trend as a function of doping furthermore suggests the evolution from a phonon-renormalized Fermi-liquid toward a gas of small polarons in the limit of x$\to $0.
*This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation through the National Center of Competence in Research ``Materials with Novel Electronic Properties-MaNEP''.
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