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			<titleStmt><title level='a'>Anomalous quantum criticality in the electron-doped cuprates</title></titleStmt>
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				<publisher></publisher>
				<date>03/26/2019</date>
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				<bibl> 
					<idno type="par_id">10096468</idno>
					<idno type="doi">10.1073/pnas.1817653116</idno>
					<title level='j'>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</title>
<idno>0027-8424</idno>
<biblScope unit="volume">116</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="issue">13</biblScope>					

					<author>P. R. Mandal</author><author>Tarapada Sarkar</author><author>Richard L. Greene</author>
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			<abstract><ab><![CDATA[In the physics of condensed matter, quantum critical phenomena and unconventional superconductivity are two major themes. In electron-doped cuprates, the low critical field (H              C2              ) allows one to study the putative quantum critical point (QCP) at low temperature and to understand its connection to the long-standing problem of the origin of the high-                              T                C                            superconductivity. Here we present measurements of the low-temperature normal-state thermopower (              S              ) of the electron-doped cuprate superconductor La                              2−                x                            Ce                              x                            CuO              4              (LCCO) from              x              = 0.11–0.19. We observe quantum critical                                                                                          S                      /                      T                                                                                  versus                                                                    l                    n                                          (                                                                        1                          /                          T                                                                    )                                                                                  behavior over an unexpectedly wide doping range              x              = 0.15–0.17 above the QCP (              x              = 0.14), with a slope that scales monotonically with the superconducting transition temperature (                              T                C                            with H = 0). The presence of quantum criticality over a wide doping range provides a window on the criticality. The thermopower behavior also suggests that the critical fluctuations are linked with                              T                C                            . Above the superconductivity dome, at              x              = 0.19, a conventional Fermi-liquid                                                                    S                    ∝                    T                                                              behavior is found for                                                                    T                    ≤                                                              40 K.]]></ab></abstract>
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<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><p>In the physics of condensed matter, quantum critical phenomena and unconventional superconductivity are two major themes. In electron-doped cuprates, the low critical field (H C2 ) allows one to study the putative quantum critical point (QCP) at low temperature and to understand its connection to the long-standing problem of the origin of the high-T C superconductivity. Here we present measurements of the low-temperature normal-state thermopower (S) of the electron-doped cuprate superconductor La 2-x Ce x CuO 4 (LCCO) from x = 0.11-0.19. We observe quantum critical S=T versus ln(1=T ) behavior over an unexpectedly wide doping range x = 0.15-0.17 above the QCP (x = 0.14), with a slope that scales monotonically with the superconducting transition temperature (T C with H = 0). The presence of quantum criticality over a wide doping range provides a window on the criticality. The thermopower behavior also suggests that the critical fluctuations are linked with T C . Above the superconductivity dome, at x = 0.19, a conventional Fermi-liquid S &#8733; T behavior is found for T &#8804; 40 K.</p><p>cuprates | thermopower | quantum criticality A quantum critical point (QCP) arises when a continuous transition between competing phases occurs at zero temperature. The existence of a QCP has been suggested in a variety of exotic materials, in particular under the superconducting dome in high-T C copper oxides (cuprates) <ref type="bibr">(1)</ref>. In strongly correlated materials displaying antiferromagnetic (AFM) order, such as heavy fermions, cuprates, and iron pnictides, quantum criticality is an important theme for understanding the lowtemperature physics and the superconductivity. In these materials it is believed that quantum fluctuations influence the physical properties over a wide temperature region above QCP. In this region the system shows a marked deviation from conventional Landau Fermi-liquid (FL) behavior. The superconductivity (SC) in the cuprates may be governed by proximity to a QCP, although exactly how is still a mystery despite many years of intense research on these materials <ref type="bibr">(1)</ref><ref type="bibr">(2)</ref><ref type="bibr">(3)</ref>. In hole-doped cuprates, a QCP has been found to be associated with the disappearance of the pseudogap phase (4-6), a phase of unknown origin. The electron-doped cuprates have a less complex dopingphase diagram and a much lower upper-critical field <ref type="bibr">(7)</ref>, which allows the T &#8594; 0 K normal state to be studied over the entire phase diagram. The absence of pseudogap physics, and other unidentified competing phases, allows the QCP to be attributed to the disappearance of AFM as doping is increased away from the Mott insulating state at x = 0 (8). However, the relation between quantum criticality and the normal-state behavior of the n-type (and p-type) cuprates is still an important open question.</p><p>In the past, the transport properties of the n-type cuprates near the AFM QCP have been studied primarily by electrical resistivity and Hall effect measurements <ref type="bibr">(8,</ref><ref type="bibr">9)</ref> and Shubnikov-de Hass oscillations <ref type="bibr">(10,</ref><ref type="bibr">11)</ref>. These experiments, along with angleresolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) <ref type="bibr">(12,</ref><ref type="bibr">13)</ref>, have given strong evidence for a Fermi surface reconstruction (FSR) at this AFM QCP, at a doping just above the optimal doping for superconductivity. In this article, we provide a surprising insight on the quantum criticality via thermoelectric measurements in the field-driven normal state of the electron-doped cuprate La 2-x Ce x CuO 4 (LCCO), for doping above and below the purported QCP. The temperature dependence of the thermopower at low temperatures provides a distinctive signature of quantum critical behavior <ref type="bibr">(14)</ref>.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Results and Discussion</head><p>The Seebeck coefficient (also known as thermopower) is a quantity that measures the energy dependence of the conductivity. The Seebeck coefficient is related to the electric field generated by a thermal gradient in the absence of a charge current and is defined as S = &#916;V =&#916;T, where &#916;V is the voltage and &#916;T is the temperature difference <ref type="bibr">(15)</ref>. The thermopower basically measures the entropy per mobile particle. The thermopower of a normal metal contains two contributions. One is related to the energy-dependent electronic parameters near the Fermi energy (E F ) and at low temperature is proportional to T/E F . Another contribution is the phonon drag contribution, which is most important in the temperature region where a typical phonon wavelength is comparable to the Fermi wavelength and phonon-electron scattering is predominant. At the lower temperature of our present experiments the phonon drag contribution can be ignored <ref type="bibr">(15)</ref>.</p><p>Our normal-state thermopower (S) measurements have been carried out from 2 to 80 K on LCCO thin films with doping from x = 0.11 to 0.17 in a magnetic field of H &gt; H C2 . Detailed information on the thermopower measurement technique is given in SI Appendix (see ref. 7 for details). Fig. <ref type="figure">1A</ref> presents the data for S (T) in the normal state below 80 K plotted as S=T versus T for x = 0.11-0.17. Similar data are found for several films at each Significance Understanding the normal state in superconducting cuprates is crucial to the understanding of origin of the superconductivity. It has been conjectured that many properties of the cuprates arise from proximity to a quantum critical doping. Here, by measuring the low-temperature normal-state thermopower in n-type La 2-x Ce x CuO 4 , we observe a quantum critical S=T versus ln(1=T ) behavior over an unexpectedly wide doping range x = 0.15 -0.17. Above a Fermi surface reconstruction at x = 0.14, the slope of S/T scales with T C , suggesting a link between the critical fluctuations and the superconductivity. In contrast to other quantum critical systems, the presence of quantum criticality over an extended doping range provides a clue to the connection between quantum criticality and superconductivity.</p><p>doping. For x = 0.11 and 0.13, S=T displays a strong temperature dependence and below a temperature T Smax becomes increasingly negative. This shows that electrons dominate the lowtemperature normal-state thermopower for these dopings. The peak in S=T decreases from T Smax &#8764; 27 K for x = 0.11 to T Smax &#8764; 15 K for 0.13. In Fig. <ref type="figure">2</ref> we show the data of Fig. <ref type="figure">1A</ref> plotted as S=T vs. ln T for the doping x = 0.15, 0.16, and 0.17. For all these dopings, the low-temperature behavior of S/T goes as ln (1/T), with a deviation away from this behavior at higher temperature.</p><p>The dramatic change in the sign and magnitude of S=T from the overdoped to underdoped region at 4 K is consistent with the Hall effect <ref type="bibr">(16)</ref>, where the 4 K value of R H is observed to change from negative for x &lt; 0.14 to positive above x &gt; 0.14. As shown in Fig. <ref type="figure">3C</ref> the normal-state Hall resistivity maxima T RHmax (the temperature below which Hall coefficient starts to fall) and T Smax lie on the same line, which is the estimated FSR line, T FSR . The T FSR separates the large, hole-like, FSR from the reconstructed FS. In the T-x phase diagram, commensurate (&#960;, &#960;) spin density wave modulations have been inferred from in-plane angular magnetoresistance (AMR) measurements <ref type="bibr">(17)</ref> below the FSR doping at x = 0.14. The AMR is found at doping above where long-range AFM order is claimed to end (&#8764;0.08 in LCCO) <ref type="bibr">(18)</ref>, suggesting that AMR is sensitive to short-range magnetic correlations. All dramatic changes in the transport properties are observed at 0.14 doping and not at 0.08. A similar behavior is found for other n-type cuprates <ref type="bibr">(8)</ref><ref type="bibr">(9)</ref><ref type="bibr">(10)</ref><ref type="bibr">(11)</ref><ref type="bibr">(12)</ref><ref type="bibr">(13)</ref><ref type="bibr">19)</ref>. In addition, quantum oscillation <ref type="bibr">(11)</ref> and ARPES <ref type="bibr">(20)</ref> measurements have seen evidence for the reconstructed FS for x &lt; 0.14. Further such measurements are needed to verify the existence of the large holelike FS for x &gt; 0.14, as suggested by our thermopower and Hall experiments. In summary, the experimental evidence to date suggests that for LCCO there is a QCP at x = 0.14 driven by short-range AFM order.</p><p>One expects that fluctuations associated with this QCP at T = 0 K will impact transport (and other properties) at finite temperatures above the QCP (2). The most studied of these transport properties is the non-FL resistivity (&#961; &#8764; T n , with n &lt; 2) at low temperatures <ref type="bibr">(21,</ref><ref type="bibr">22)</ref>. In addition, in some heavy fermion materials a non-FL logarithmic temperature dependence of the low-temperature thermopower has also been observed near a magnetic QCP. For example, the thermopower in the heavy fermion YbRh 2 Si 2 shows the logarithmic increase S=T = log&#240;T= T&#222; with T = 3 K in the QCP regime <ref type="bibr">(23)</ref> and in CeCoIn 5 the normal state S/T is observed to vary as ln T near the field-induced QCP <ref type="bibr">(24)</ref>.</p><p>This non-Fermi-liquid (NFL) behavior of S (T) has been interpreted to result from low-energy quasi-2D spin fluctuations  associated with an AFM QCP <ref type="bibr">(14)</ref>. In this theory, the thermopower is given by</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>A B</head><p>T ln&#240;&#969; S =&#948;&#222;, <ref type="bibr">[1]</ref> where N &#240;0&#222; is the density of states at the Fermi energy e F , g 2 0 is the coupling between the electrons and the spin fluctuations, and &#969; S is the energy of the spin fluctuations. Here &#948; measures the deviation from the critical point &#189;&#948; = &#915;&#240;pp c &#222; + T, where p depends on experimental parameters like doping, pressure, or magnetic field that can be tuned to the critical point. As shown in ref. <ref type="bibr">14</ref>, when T is greater than zero, the thermopower is given by S=T &#8733; A ln&#240;1=T&#222; in proximity to the QCP, where</p><p>. Away from the critical point the thermopower shows a cross-over to an FL behavior S=T &#8733; constant as T decreases.</p><p>Our thermopower data shown in Fig. <ref type="figure">2</ref> are in qualitative agreement with the Paul and Kotliar theory <ref type="bibr">(14)</ref> at least down to 2 K. Experimentally, we find S=T = A TEP ln&#240;1=T&#222; over a wide doping range, not just at the QCP, with no sign of a lowtemperature deviation toward S/T being constant at any doping (here A TEP is defined as our experimental slope of S/T versus logarithmic T). This suggests an "anomalous quantum criticality" in LCCO with a quantum critical region from x &#8805; 0.14 to the end of the SC dome at x c &#8764; 0.175. Above x c we find conventional FL behavior S=T &#8733; constant at x = 0.19 (Fig. <ref type="figure">1B</ref>). To better understand the anomalous critical behavior in LCCO we have reanalyzed our prior thermopower data of the electron-doped cuprate, Pr 2-x Ce x CuO 4 (PCCO) measured in the normal state <ref type="bibr">(25)</ref>. Fig. <ref type="figure">2</ref> presents the temperature dependence of S/T vs. ln T for PCCO down to 3 K with doping x = 0.16, 0.17, and 0.19 at 9 T. The S/T shows a ln (1/T) dependence down to the lowest measured temperature for all of the doping and a deviation away from the ln (1/T) behavior at higher temperature. Thus, the normal-state thermopower of PCCO and LCCO has a slope A TEP that scales monotonically with the change of T C for different doping as shown in Fig. <ref type="figure">3</ref>. So, this behavior appears to be universal in the electron-doped copper oxides. Our data are supported by the low-temperature normal-state resistivity behavior for LCCO, where for x = 0.15, 0.16, and 0.17 the resistivity varies linearly with temperature down to 20 mK <ref type="bibr">(21)</ref>. So, the breadth of the critical region in LCCO (and PCCO) suggests that the physics in the electron-doped cuprates is associated with an extended quantum phase.</p><p>In Fig. <ref type="figure">3</ref> A and B, we show the coefficient A TEP &#240;x&#222; of the S=T logarithmic T dependence, obtained from fits to the low temperature regions with S=T &#8733; ln&#240;1=T&#222;, as a function of doping for both LCCO and PCCO. A significant discovery of this work is that A TEP &#240;x&#222; decreases with T C as x increases and goes to zero at the doping where SC ends. From the discussion of theoretical Eq. 1, we will assume that A TEP &#240;x&#222; = A. Therefore, if Eq. 1 is valid for our data, then A TEP &#240;x&#222; depends mainly on the strength, g, of the coupling between the electrons and the spin fluctuations. Therefore, the strength of this coupling appears to be directly linked to the electron pairing (and hence the magnitude of T C ) in the n-type cuprates.</p><p>Fig. <ref type="figure">1B</ref> presents our thermopower data for a non-SC of LCCO (x = 0.19, i.e., beyond the SC dome). In a conventional FL, we expect the low-temperature thermopower to follow (15)</p><p>We use our data to estimate the Fermi temperature and the Fermi energy &#240;T F = e F =k B &#222; from the slope of S vs. T. We find e F &#8764; 10,000 K -1 , which is in agreement with prior estimates for n-type cuprate from other experiments <ref type="bibr">(27)</ref>. The abrupt change in lowtemperature thermopower behavior from non-SC, x = 0.19, to the lower SC dopings suggests that there is a dramatic change in the normal ground state in LCCO at the end of the SC dome (x c ).</p><p>Prior evidence for an anomalous critical behavior at x c has been reported <ref type="bibr">(27)</ref>, but the origin of this critical physics is not yet understood. This is now under investigation.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Summary</head><p>We have discovered an unexpected behavior of the low-temperature thermopower &#189;S=T &#8733; ln&#240;1=T&#222; in the normal state of the electrondoped cuprate LCCO over an extended doping regime (x) above the FS reconstruction at x = 0.14. This suggests an anomalous quantum critical behavior in this system. Significantly, the magnitude of the slope of the logarithmic-in-T thermopower scales with the superconducting T C , with both going to zero at the end of the SC 0.15 0.16 0.17 </p><p>. The solid blue line (ending at x = 0.14) represents the FSR line separating the large FS from the reconstructed FS. The nearly similar values of T RHmax , and T Smax for x = 0.11 and 0.13 samples are evidence for the FSR. The shaded regime represents AFM region <ref type="bibr">(17,</ref><ref type="bibr">18)</ref>.</p><p>dome. This suggests an intimate link between the quantum critical fluctuations and the Cooper pairing. We find a similar behavior in another n-type cuprate, PCCO, strongly indicating that this is a universal behavior in the electron-doped cuprates.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Materials and Methods</head><p>The measurements have been performed on c-axis-oriented LCCO thin films for the optimally doped (x = 0.11), and overdoped (x = 0.13, 0.15, 0.16, and 0.17) compositions. The thin films were deposited on (100) SrTiO 3 (10 &#215; 5 mm 2 ) substrates by a pulsed-laser deposition (PLD) technique utilizing a KrF excimer laser as the exciting light source (7) at a temperature of 700 &#176;C and at an oxygen partial pressure of 230 mTorr. The thickness of the films used for this study is typically between 150 and 200 nm. The quality of the films was determined by the lowest residual resistivity of the samples and the SC transition width (&#916;T C ) calculated from the imaginary part of the ac susceptibility peak. The targets of the compounds for the PLD were prepared by the solid-state reaction method using 99.999% pure La 2 O 5 , CeO 5 , and CuO powders. Details regarding the electronic measurements are provided in SI Appendix.</p></div><note xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" place="foot" n="5992" xml:id="foot_0"><p>| www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1817653116   Mandal et al.</p></note>
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