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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Physics
Copper-oxide plane
at surface of superconductor has surprising properties
Jim
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
8/26/02
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Photo
courtesy Misra & Yazdani
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| Scanning
tunneling microscope tip probes a single copper-oxide plane.
Researchers believe that the symmetry of the copper's atomic
orbital strongly influences addition of electrons into this
plane. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. The peculiar behavior of high-temperature superconductors
has baffled scientists for many years. Now, by imaging the copper-oxide
plane in a cuprate superconductor for the first time, researchers at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have found several new
pieces to this important puzzle.
As
reported in the Aug. 19 issue of Physical Review Letters, physics professor
Ali Yazdani, graduate student Shashank Misra, and colleagues used a
scanning tunneling microscope to demonstrate that a single copper-oxide
plane can form a stable layer at the superconductor's surface. This
plane behaves differently when exposed at the surface than when buried
inside the crystal, the researchers discovered, offering additional
insight into the behavior of high-temperature superconductors.
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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| Physics
professor Ali Yazdani, right, and graduate student Shashank
Misra. |
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"In
contrast to previous studies, we found that this copper-oxide layer
exhibits an unusual suppression of tunneling conductance at low energies,"
Yazdani said. "We think the orbital symmetry of the plane's electronic
states may be influencing the tunneling process and is responsible for
the strange behavior we observed at the surface."
Surface-sensitive techniques, such as electron tunneling and photoemission,
have been crucial in gleaning information about high-temperature superconductors,
Yazdani said. But it hasn't always been clear from which layer the information
was coming. By imaging at the atomic scale and probing on the nanoscale,
the researchers achieved much higher precision.
"High-temperature superconductors are layered compounds containing
one or more copper-oxide planes and other layers that act as charge
reservoirs," Yazdani said. "Like dopants in a semiconductor,
these layers donate charge carriers to the copper-oxide planes, making
them conducting. The strong electronic interactions in the copper-oxide
planes are responsible for the materials unusual electronic properties."
To image the surface of thin films of superconducting crystal, Yazdani
and his colleagues used a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope
that they built at Illinois. By exploring large areas of the sample
and correlating the STM topographic images with X-ray crystallographic
data, the researchers were able to identify individual layers of copper
oxide and of bismuth oxide, and then measure their electronic properties.
"With the STM, we can send electrons through the tip and measure
the rate at which they flow into the surface," Yazdani said. "We
found a very strong contrast in the spectra taken on the two surfaces.
The electron tunneling in the copper-oxide plane was strongly suppressed
at low energies."
This behavior is unexpected in a d-wave superconductor, Yazdani said,
and could demonstrate the dramatic influence of the layered structure
on the surface electronic properties. The observations can best be explained
by the way in which the STM tip couples to the electronic states of
the copper-oxide plane, the researchers concluded.
"At low energies, electrons from the tip are constrained by the
orbital symmetry of the plane's electronic wave function, which resembles
a cloverleaf pattern," Yazdani said. "This directional dependence
of the current can explain the suppressed tunneling."
Previous measurements had been performed on surfaces terminated with
other layers bismuth oxide, for example where the copper-oxide
plane was buried under the surface. In those experiments, however, it
was not apparent how the STM tip was coupling to the copper-oxide plane,
Yazdani said.
"You could theorize that the other layers had no effect on the
measurement, but that flies in the face of our experiment," Yazdani
said. "From our results, it is clear that what you put at the surface
makes a huge difference in what you measure."
Having direct access to the surface means scientists can begin manipulating
its properties by changing what's under the surface. The Illinois work
also opens a new methodology for probing electrons in the copper-oxide
plane.
Collaborators on the project were physics professor James Eckstein,
postdoctoral research associate Tiziana DiLuccio, and graduate students
Seongshik Oh and Daniel Hornbaker. The National Science Foundation,
Office of Naval Research and the U.S. Department of Energy funded the
work.
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