Temperature and field dependence of the intrinsic tunneling structure in overdoped Bi<sub>2</sub>Sr<sub>2</sub>CaCu<sub>2</sub>O<sub>8</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Tunneling in stacked ‘intrinsic’ junctions in the high-Tc superconductor doped Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 is a bulk probe of the quasiparticle density of states, which can be used to complement surface spectroscopic techniques such as ARPES and scanning tunneling microscopy. However, in order for this technique to give useful data above the superconducting sum-gap voltage, stacks with area of less than 1 (μm)2 and containing approximately 10 or fewer intrinsic junctions must be used in order to ensure negligible self-heating.

Here we present intrinsic tunneling data for mesa structures fabricated on three over- and optimally-doped Bi2.15Sr1.85CaCu2O8+δ crystals, with 0.16–0.19 holes per CuO2 unit, for a wide range of temperature (T) and applied magnetic field (H). The differential conductance above the gap edge shows a clear dip structure which is highly suggestive of strong coupling to a narrow boson mode. Data below the gap edge gives clear evidence for strong T-dependent pair breaking. These findings could help theorists make a detailed Eliashberg analysis and thereby contribute towards understanding the pairing mechanism.

*The work at the University of Warwick is supported by EPSRC, UK, Grant No. EP/M028771/1, while that at Cambridge was supported by EPSRC, UK, Grant No. EP/C511778/1.

Presenters

  • Timothy Benseman

    • Physics, CUNY Queens College

Authors

  • Timothy Benseman

    • Physics, CUNY Queens College
  • John Robert Cooper

    • Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge
  • Geetha Balakrishnan

    • University of Warwick
    • Physics Department, University of Warwick
    • Department of Physics, University of Warwick
    • Physics, University of Warwick