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Dive into the research topics where Jinsheng Wen is active.

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Featured researches published by Jinsheng Wen.


Science | 2014

Ubiquitous Interplay Between Charge Ordering and High-Temperature Superconductivity in Cuprates

Eduardo H. da Silva Neto; Pegor Aynajian; A. Frano; Riccardo Comin; E. Schierle; E. Weschke; Andras Gyenis; Jinsheng Wen; J. A. Schneeloch; Z. Xu; Shimpei Ono; Genda Gu; Mathieu Le Tacon; Ali Yazdani

Besides superconductivity, copper-oxide high-temperature superconductors are susceptible to other types of ordering. We used scanning tunneling microscopy and resonant elastic x-ray scattering measurements to establish the formation of charge ordering in the high-temperature superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x. Depending on the hole concentration, the charge ordering in this system occurs with the same period as those found in Y-based or La-based cuprates and displays the analogous competition with superconductivity. These results indicate the similarity of charge organization competing with superconductivity across different families of cuprates. We observed this charge ordering to leave a distinct electron-hole asymmetric signature (and a broad resonance centered at +20 milli–electron volts) in spectroscopic measurements, indicating that it is likely related to the organization of holes in a doped Mott insulator. Surface and bulk measurements in bismuth-based cuprates agree and indicate a short-range charge order. [Also see Perspective by Morr] Copper-Oxide Superconductors Copper-oxide superconductors have a complex electronic structure. A charge density order has been observed in two cuprate families; however, it has been unclear whether such an order exists in Bi-based compounds (see the Perspective by Morr). Comin et al. (p. 390, published online 19 December) and da Silva Neto et al. (p. 393, published online 19 December) address this question in single-layer and double-layer Bibased cuprates, respectively. For both families of materials, surface measurements by scanning tunneling spectroscopy agree with bulk measurements obtained through resonant elastic x-ray scattering, which suggests the formation of short-range correlations that modulate the charge density of the carriers over a range of dopings. Thus, charge ordering may represent a common characteristic of the major cuprate families.


Nature | 2010

Fluctuating stripes at the onset of the pseudogap in the high-Tc superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x

Colin Parker; Pegor Aynajian; Eduardo H. da Silva Neto; Aakash Pushp; Shimpei Ono; Jinsheng Wen; Z. Xu; Genda Gu; Ali Yazdani

Doped Mott insulators have a strong propensity to form patterns of holes and spins often referred to as stripes. In copper oxides, doping also gives rise to the pseudogap state, which can be transformed into a high-temperature superconducting state with sufficient doping or by reducing the temperature. A long-standing issue has been the interplay between the pseudogap, which is generic to all hole-doped copper oxide superconductors, and stripes, whose static form occurs in only one family of copper oxides over a narrow range of the phase diagram. Here we report observations of the spatial reorganization of electronic states with the onset of the pseudogap state in the high-temperature superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x, using spectroscopic mapping with a scanning tunnelling microscope. We find that the onset of the pseudogap phase coincides with the appearance of electronic patterns that have the predicted characteristics of fluctuating stripes. As expected, the stripe patterns are strongest when the hole concentration in the CuO2 planes is close to 1/8 (per copper atom). Although they demonstrate that the fluctuating stripes emerge with the onset of the pseudogap state and occur over a large part of the phase diagram, our experiments indicate that the stripes are a consequence of pseudogap behaviour rather than its cause.


Nature Physics | 2011

Disentangling Cooper-pair formation above the transition temperature from the pseudogap state in the cuprates

Takeshi Kondo; Yoichiro Hamaya; A. D. Palczewski; Tsunehiro Takeuchi; Jinsheng Wen; Z. J. Xu; G. D. Gu; Joerg Schmalian; A. Kaminski

The pseudogap state in the cuprate superconductors shows signs of electronic pair formation above the superconducting temperature. Is it just a ‘precursor’ state or a separate (and competing) state? In fact, both interpretations seem to be correct.


Science | 2008

Electronic Origin of the Inhomogeneous Pairing Interaction in the High-Tc Superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ

Abhay N. Pasupathy; Aakash Pushp; Kenjiro K. Gomes; Colin Parker; Jinsheng Wen; Z. Xu; Genda Gu; Shimpei Ono; Yoichi Ando; Ali Yazdani

Identifying the mechanism of superconductivity in the high-temperature cuprate superconductors is one of the major outstanding problems in physics. We report local measurements of the onset of superconducting pairing in the high–transition temperature (Tc) superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ using a lattice-tracking spectroscopy technique with a scanning tunneling microscope. We can determine the temperature dependence of the pairing energy gaps, the electronic excitations in the absence of pairing, and the effect of the local coupling of electrons to bosonic excitations. Our measurements reveal that the strength of pairing is determined by the unusual electronic excitations of the normal state, suggesting that strong electron-electron interactions rather than low-energy (<0.1 volts) electron-boson interactions are responsible for superconductivity in the cuprates.


Physical Review B | 2012

Isotropic superconducting gaps with enhanced pairing on electron Fermi surfaces in FeTe0.55Se0.45

H. Miao; P. Richard; Y. Tanaka; K. Nakayama; T. Qian; K. Umezawa; T. Sato; Y.-M. Xu; Y. B. Shi; N. Xu; X. P. Wang; P. Zhang; H. B. Yang; Z. J. Xu; Jinsheng Wen; G. D. Gu; X. Dai; Jiuning Hu; T. Takahashi; H. Ding

We used angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to reveal directly the momentum distribution of the superconducting gap in FeTe1-xSex, which has the simplest structure of all Fe-based superconductors. We found isotropic superconducting gaps on all Fermi surfaces whose sizes can be fitted by a single gap function derived from a strong coupling approach, promoting local antiferromagnetic exchange interactions as a serious candidate for the pairing origin.


Science | 2009

Extending Universal Nodal Excitations Optimizes Superconductivity in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ

Aakash Pushp; Colin Parker; Abhay N. Pasupathy; Kenjiro K. Gomes; Shimpei Ono; Jinsheng Wen; Z. Xu; Genda Gu; Ali Yazdani

Cuprate Analysis Despite more than 20 years of intensive effort, the mechanism providing superconductivity in the cuprates remains elusive and contentious, partly because the cuprates are inhomogeneous. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) and high-resolution, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy provide energy and momentum information about the excitations in the high-temperature cuprate superconductors. Pushp et al. (p. 1689, published online 4 June) provide a STS study of the cuprate Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ over a range of doping levels and temperatures. This methodology for analyzing the spectra takes into account the inhomogeneity and may provide insight into how a superconducting pairing mechanism evolves from the parent insulating state. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy reveals strong electronic correlations in the insulating state of a cuprate superconductor. Understanding the mechanism by which d wave superconductivity in the cuprates emerges and is optimized by doping the Mott insulator is one of the major outstanding problems in condensed-matter physics. Our high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy measurements of the high–transition temperature (Tc) superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ show that samples with different Tc values in the low doping regime follow a remarkably universal d wave low-energy excitation spectrum, indicating a doping-independent nodal gap. We demonstrate that Tc instead correlates with the fraction of the Fermi surface over which the samples exhibit the universal spectrum. Optimal Tc is achieved when all parts of the Fermi surface follow this universal behavior. Increasing the temperature above Tc turns the universal spectrum into an arc of gapless excitations, whereas overdoping breaks down the universal nodal behavior.


Physical Review B | 2008

Evidence for unusual superconducting correlations coexisting with stripe order in La 1.875 Ba 0.125 CuO 4

J. M. Tranquada; G. D. Gu; M. Hücker; Qing Jie; Hye Jung Kang; R. Klingeler; Q. Li; N. Tristan; Jinsheng Wen; Guangyong Xu; Z. J. Xu; Juan Zhou; M. V. Zimmermann

We present new x-ray and neutron-scattering measurements of stripe order in


Nature Physics | 2010

Observation of a d -wave nodal liquid in highly underdoped Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8+ δ

Utpal Chatterjee; M. Shi; D. Ai; J. Zhao; Amit Kanigel; S. Rosenkranz; H. Raffy; Z. Z. Li; Kazuo Kadowaki; David G. Hinks; Z. J. Xu; Jinsheng Wen; G. D. Gu; C.T. Lin; H. Claus; M. R. Norman; Mohit Randeria; J. C. Campuzano

{\text{La}}_{1.875}{\text{Ba}}_{0.125}{\text{CuO}}_{4}


Science | 2012

Imaging the Impact of Single Oxygen Atoms on Superconducting Bi2+ySr2–yCaCu2O8+x

Ilija Zeljkovic; Z. Xu; Jinsheng Wen; Genda Gu; Robert S. Markiewicz; Jennifer Hoffman

, along with low-field susceptibility, thermal conductivity, and specific-heat data. We compare these with previously reported results for resistivity and thermopower. Temperature-dependent features indicating transitions (or crossovers) are correlated among the various experimental quantities. Taking into account recent spectroscopic studies, we argue that the most likely interpretation of the complete collection of results is that an unusual form of two-dimensional superconducting correlations appears together with the onset of spin-stripe order. Recent theoretical proposals for a sinusoidally modulated superconducting state compatible with stripe order provide an intriguing explanation of our results and motivate further experimental tests. We also discuss evidence for one-dimensional pairing correlations that appear together with the charge order. With regard to the overall phenomenology, we consider the degree to which similar behavior may have been observed in other cuprates and describe possible connections to various puzzling phenomena in cuprate superconductors.


Nature Physics | 2009

Imaging nanoscale Fermi-surface variations in an inhomogeneous superconductor

W. D. Wise; Kamalesh Chatterjee; Michael Boyer; Takeshi Kondo; T. Takeuchi; Hiroshi Ikuta; Z. Xu; Jinsheng Wen; G. D. Gu; Yayu Wang; E. W. Hudson

High-temperature superconductivity in the cuprates arises when charge carriers are added to an insulator. Between these states lies the so-called nodal liquid at low temperature. Photoemission spectroscopy suggests that superconductivity evolves smoothly from this nodal-liquid state.

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G. D. Gu

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Z. Xu

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Genda Gu

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Z. J. Xu

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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J. M. Tranquada

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Takeshi Kondo

Tokyo University of Science

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Zhiwei Lin

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Q. Li

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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M. Hücker

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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