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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Incommensurate Valence Bond Density Waves in the Glassy Phase of Underdoped Cuprates

Niestemski, Liang Ren January 2011 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Ziqiang Wang / One of the most unconventional electronic states in high transition temperature cuprate superconductors is the pseudogap state. In the temperature versus doping phase diagram, the pseudogap state straddles across the antiferromagnetic (AF) state near half filling and the superconducting (SC) dome on the hole doped side above the transition temperature Tc. The relationship between the pseudogap state and these two well known states - the AF state and the SC state is believed to be very important for understanding superconductivity and the emergent quantum electronic matter in doped Mott insulators. The pseudogap is characterized by the emergence of a soft gap in the single-particle excitation spectrum in the normal state in the temperature range between Tc and a characteristic temperature T*, i.e. Tc < T < T*. The most puzzling feature of the pseudogap is the nodal-antinodal dichotomy. Observed by ARPES in momentum space, the Fermi surface is gapped out in the antinodal region leaving a Fermi arc of gapless excitations near the nodes. Whether the pseudogap is an incoherent superconducting gap (onegap scenario) or it is a different gap governed by other mechanisms, other than superconductivity, (two-gap scenario) is still under debate. In this thesis I study the particle-particle channel and the particle-hole channel of the valence bond fluctuations away from half filling. Based on a strong-coupling analysis of the t-J model, I argue that the superexchange interaction J induced incommensurate bond centered density wave order is the driving mechanism for the pseudogap state. Low energy density of states (DOS) are eliminated by multiple incommensurate scatterings in the antinodal region at the Fermi level. I show that the interplay between the incommensurate bond centered d-wave density wave instability and the intrinsic electronic inhomogeneity in real cuprate materials is responsible for the observed pseudogap phenomena. Utilizing the spatially unrestricted Gutzwiller approximation, I show that the off-stoichiometric doping induced electrostatic disorder pins the low-energy d-wave bond density fluctuations, resulting in a VBG phase. The antinodal Fermi surface (FS) sections are gapped out, giving rise to a genuine normal state Fermi arc. The length of the Fermi arc shrinks with underdoping below the temperature T* determined by thermal filling of the antinodal pseudogap. Below Tc, the d-wave superconducting gap due to singlet pairing coexists and competes with the VBG pseudogap. The spatial, momentum, temperature and doping dependence of these two gaps are consistent with recent ARPES and STM observations in underdoped and chemically substituted cuprates. The temperature versus doping phase diagram captures the salient properties of the pseudogap phenomena and provides theoretical support for the two-gap scenario. In addition to resolving the complexities of the quantum electronic states in hole-doped cuprates, my unified theory elucidates the important role of the interplay between the strong electronic correlation and the intrinsic electronic disorder in doped transition metal oxides. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2011. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Physics.
2

Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy

Ekahana, Sandy Adhitia January 2018 (has links)
Nodal semimetals host either degenerate points (Dirac/Weyl points) or lines whose band topology in Brillouin zone can be classified either as trivial (normal nodal semimetals) or non trivial (topological nodal semimetals). This thesis investigates the electronic structure of two different categories of topological nodal semimetals probed by angleresolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES): The first material is Indium Bismuth (InBi). InBi is a semimetal with simple tetragonal structure with P4/nmm space group. This space group is predicted to host protected nodal lines along the perpendicular momentum direction at the high symmetry lines of the Brillouin zone boundary even under strong spin-orbit coupling (SOC) situation. As a semimetal with two heavy elements, InBi is a suitable candidate to test the prediction. The investigation by ARPES demonstrates not only that InBi hosts the nodal line in the presence of strong SOC, it also shows the signature of type-II Dirac crossing along the perpendicular momentum direction from the center of Brillouin zone. However, as the nodal line observed is trivial in nature, there is no exotic drumhead surface states observed in this material. This finding demonstrates that Dirac crossings can be protected in a non-symmorphic space group. The second material is NbIrTe<sub>4</sub> which is a semimetal that breaks inversion symmetry predicted to host only four Weyl points. This simplest configuration is confirmed by the measurement from the top and bottom surface of NbIrTe<sub>4</sub> showing only a pair of Fermi arcs each. Furthermore, it is found that the Fermi arc connectivity on the bottom surface experiences re-wiring as it evolves from Weyl points energy to the ARPES Fermi energy level. This change is attributed to the hybridisation between the surface and the bulk states as their projection lie within the vicinity of each other. The finding in this work demonstrates that although Fermi arcs are guaranteed in Weyl semimetals, their shape and connectivity are not protected and may be altered accordingly.
3

DEGENERATE SECOND ORDER NONLINEAR OPTICAL SPECTROSCOPY OF CHIRAL WEYL SEMIMETALS

Lu, Baozhu, 0000-0002-5935-7173 January 2020 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the development of nonlinear optical techniques and the measurement of topological properties of the Weyl semimetals. The first portion of this thesis describes technical developments of the nonlinear optical spectroscopic probes rotational anisotropy second harmonic generation (RA-SHG) and transient grating. In our work on SHG, we describe a fast-reflective optic-based rotational anisotropy nonlinear harmonic generation spectrometer built upon synchronization of stepper motors and a voice-coil fast turning motor with data recorded by a data acquisition card. This device enables fast accumulation of significantly more data points than traditional SHG spectrometers and further allows spectral measurement over a broad wavelength range to be performed without optical realignment. We then describe the Fourier domain RA-SHG, allows direct measurements of the RA-SHG signal components of Cn symmetry. This method is based on the fast scanning RA-SHG device described above and operates by recording the nth harmonics of the fast scanning signal using a lock-in amplifier. Finally, we describe a novel method of performing transient grating measurements based on low power laser diodes, a laser diode pulser, a digital delay generator, and a data acquisition card. The RA-SHG technique was applied to the chiral Weyl semimetal RhSi, where a spectrum of the sole SHG tensor element χ(2) i jk was measured over the unprecedented 0.275-1.5 eV incoming photon energy range. Our data shows evidence of a strong surface state response and are detailed enough to reveal the second order corrections to the linear band structure as well as the Pauli blocking condition which was observed to occur at ∼630 meV. We also describe measurements of the linear photogalvanic effect (LPGE) and circular photogalvanic effect (CPGE) in RhSi deriving from topological Fermi arc states. While the magnitude of the CPGE response broadly matched theoretical predictions, the data also exhibit an inexplicably high degree of symmetry in the response as a function of incoming polarization in both CPGE and LPGE channels. Collaborative work on the SHG spectrum from TaAs is also described, from which we attribute the origin of the SHG response peak to the third cumulant of the Bloch wavefunction. Further collaborative studies of the CPGE in RhSi (111) revealed a response that was likely due to the topological band structure, but that also shows that the theoretically predicted quantized CPGE was not observed due to impurities and from contributions from sources other than the Weyl nodes. Finally, we briefly summarized how the crystal structure of PrAlGe1-xSix was revealed to be non-centrosymmetric using the RA-SHG technique. Transition from intrinsic to extrinsic anomalous Hall effect by tuning the dopant concentration x was studied in this ferromagnetic Weyl semimetal. / Physics

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