Louis Taillefer
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research
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Featured researches published by Louis Taillefer.
Nature | 2007
Nicolas Doiron-Leyraud; Cyril Proust; David LeBoeuf; Julien Levallois; J.-B. Bonnemaison; Ruixing Liang; D. A. Bonn; W. N. Hardy; Louis Taillefer
Despite twenty years of research, the phase diagram of high-transition-temperature superconductors remains enigmatic. A central issue is the origin of the differences in the physical properties of these copper oxides doped to opposite sides of the superconducting region. In the overdoped regime, the material behaves as a reasonably conventional metal, with a large Fermi surface. The underdoped regime, however, is highly anomalous and appears to have no coherent Fermi surface, but only disconnected ‘Fermi arcs’. The fundamental question, then, is whether underdoped copper oxides have a Fermi surface, and if so, whether it is topologically different from that seen in the overdoped regime. Here we report the observation of quantum oscillations in the electrical resistance of the oxygen-ordered copper oxide YBa2Cu3O6.5, establishing the existence of a well-defined Fermi surface in the ground state of underdoped copper oxides, once superconductivity is suppressed by a magnetic field. The low oscillation frequency reveals a Fermi surface made of small pockets, in contrast to the large cylinder characteristic of the overdoped regime. Two possible interpretations are discussed: either a small pocket is part of the band structure specific to YBa2Cu3O6.5 or small pockets arise from a topological change at a critical point in the phase diagram. Our understanding of high-transition-temperature (high-Tc) superconductors will depend critically on which of these two interpretations proves to be correct.
Nature | 2007
David LeBoeuf; Nicolas Doiron-Leyraud; Julien Levallois; R. Daou; J.-B. Bonnemaison; Nigel E. Hussey; L. Balicas; B. J. Ramshaw; Ruixing Liang; D. A. Bonn; W. N. Hardy; Seiji Adachi; Cyril Proust; Louis Taillefer
High-temperature superconductivity in copper oxides occurs when the materials are chemically tuned to have a carrier concentration intermediate between their metallic state at high doping and their insulating state at zero doping. The underlying evolution of the electron system in the absence of superconductivity is still unclear, and a question of central importance is whether it involves any intermediate phase with broken symmetry. The Fermi surface of the electronic states in the underdoped ‘YBCO’ materials YBa2Cu3Oy and YBa2Cu4O8 was recently shown to include small pockets, in contrast with the large cylinder that characterizes the overdoped regime, pointing to a topological change in the Fermi surface. Here we report the observation of a negative Hall resistance in the magnetic-field-induced normal state of YBa2Cu3Oy and YBa2Cu4O8, which reveals that these pockets are electron-like rather than hole-like. We propose that these electron pockets most probably arise from a reconstruction of the Fermi surface caused by the onset of a density-wave phase, as is thought to occur in the electron-doped copper oxides near the onset of antiferromagnetic order. Comparison with materials of the La2CuO4 family that exhibit spin/charge density-wave order suggests that a Fermi surface reconstruction also occurs in those materials, pointing to a generic property of high-transition-temperature (Tc) superconductors.
Nature | 2010
R. Daou; J. Chang; David LeBoeuf; O. Cyr-Choinière; Francis Laliberté; Nicolas Doiron-Leyraud; B. J. Ramshaw; Ruixing Liang; D. A. Bonn; W. N. Hardy; Louis Taillefer
The nature of the pseudogap phase is a central problem in the effort to understand the high-transition-temperature (high-Tc) copper oxide superconductors. A fundamental question is what symmetries are broken when the pseudogap phase sets in, which occurs when the temperature decreases below a value T*. There is evidence from measurements of both polarized neutron diffraction and the polar Kerr effect that time-reversal symmetry is broken, but at temperatures that differ significantly from one another. Broken rotational symmetry was detected from both resistivity measurements and inelastic neutron scattering at low doping, and from scanning tunnelling spectroscopy at low temperature, but showed no clear relation to T*. Here we report the observation of a large in-plane anisotropy of the Nernst effect in YBa2Cu3Oy that sets in precisely at T* throughout the doping phase diagram. We show that the CuO chains of the orthorhombic lattice are not responsible for this anisotropy, which is therefore an intrinsic property of the CuO2 planes. We conclude that the pseudogap phase is an electronic state that strongly breaks four-fold rotational symmetry. This narrows the range of possible states considerably, pointing to stripe or nematic order.
Physical Review Letters | 2003
Johnpierre Paglione; Makariy A. Tanatar; D. G. Hawthorn; Etienne Boaknin; R. W. Hill; F. Ronning; M. Sutherland; Louis Taillefer; Cedomir Petrovic; P. C. Canfield
The resistivity of the heavy-fermion superconductor CeCoIn5 was measured as a function of temperature, down to 25 mK and in magnetic fields of up to 16 T applied perpendicular to the basal plane. With increasing field, we observe a suppression of the non-Fermi liquid behavior, rho approximately T, and the development of a Fermi liquid state, with its characteristic rho=rho(0)+AT2 dependence. The field dependence of the T2 coefficient shows critical behavior with an exponent of 1.37. This is evidence for a field-induced quantum critical point (QCP), occurring at a critical field which coincides, within experimental accuracy, with the superconducting critical field H(c2). We discuss the relation of this field-tuned QCP to a change in the magnetic state, seen as a change in magnetoresistance from positive to negative, at a crossover line that has a common border with the superconducting region below approximately 1 K.
Physical Review Letters | 2002
Cyril Proust; Etienne Boaknin; R. W. Hill; Louis Taillefer; A. P. Mackenzie
The transport of heat and charge in the overdoped cuprate superconductor Tl(2)Ba2CuO(6+delta) was measured down to low temperature. In the normal state, obtained by applying a magnetic field greater than the upper critical field, the Wiedemann-Franz law is verified to hold perfectly. In the superconducting state, a large residual linear term is observed in the thermal conductivity, in quantitative agreement with BCS theory for a d-wave superconductor. This is compelling evidence that the electrons in overdoped cuprates form a Fermi liquid, with no indication of spin-charge separation.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
A. F. Bangura; J. D. Fletcher; Antony Carrington; J. Levallois; Marc Nardone; Baptiste Vignolle; Peter J Heard; Nicolas Doiron-Leyraud; David LeBoeuf; Louis Taillefer; S Adachi; Cyril Proust; N. E. Hussey
A. F. Bangura, J. D. Fletcher, A. Carrington, J. Levallois, M. Nardone, B. Vignolle , P. J. Heard, N. Doiron-Leyraud, D. LeBoeuf, L. Taillefer, S. Adachi, C. Proust and N. E. Hussey H. H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Tyndall Avenue, BS8 1TL, United Kingdom. Laboratoire National des Champs Magnétiques Pulsés, UMR CNRS-UPS-INSA 5147, Toulouse, France. Département de physique and RQMP, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, J1K 2R1, Canada. and Superconducting Research Laboratory, International Superconductivity Center, Shinonome 1-10-13, Tokyo 135, Japan. (Dated: February 1, 2008)
Physical Review B | 2011
David LeBoeuf; Nicolas Doiron-Leyraud; Baptiste Vignolle; M. Sutherland; B. J. Ramshaw; J. Levallois; Ramzy Daou; Francis Laliberté; O. Cyr-Choinière; Johan Chang; Y. J. Jo; L. Balicas; Ruixing Liang; D. A. Bonn; W. N. Hardy; Cyril Proust; Louis Taillefer
The Hall coefficient RH of the cuprate superconductor YBa 2Cu3Oy was measured in magnetic fields up to 60 T for a hole concentration p from 0.078 to 0.152 in the underdoped regime. In fields large enough to suppress superconductivity, RH(T) is seen to go from positive at high temperature to negative at low temperature, for p0.08. This change of sign is attributed to the emergence of an electron pocket in the Fermi surface at low temperature. At p<0.08, the normal-state R H(T) remains positive at all temperatures, increasing monotonically as T→0. We attribute the change of behavior across p=0.08 to a Lifshitz transition, namely a change in Fermi-surface topology occurring at a critical concentration pL=0.08, where the electron pocket vanishes. The loss of the high-mobility electron pocket across pL coincides with a tenfold drop in the conductivity at low temperature, revealed in measurements of the electrical resistivity ρ at high fields, showing that the so-called metal-insulator crossover of cuprates is in fact driven by a Lifshitz transition. It also coincides with a jump in the in-plane anisotropy of ρ, showing that without its electron pocket, the Fermi surface must have strong twofold in-plane anisotropy. These findings are consistent with a Fermi-surface reconstruction caused by a unidirectional spin-density wave or stripe order.
Nature | 2001
R. W. Hill; Cyril Proust; Louis Taillefer; P. Fournier; R. L. Greene
The behaviour of electrons in solids is well described by Landaus Fermi-liquid theory, which predicts that although electrons in a metal interact, they can still be treated as well defined fermions, which are called ‘quasiparticles’. At low temperatures, the ability of quasiparticles to transport heat is given strictly by their ability to transport charge, as described by a universal relation known as the Wiedemann–Franz law, which hitherto no material has been known to violate. High-temperature superconductors have long been thought to fall outside the realm of Fermi-liquid theory, as suggested by several anomalous properties, but this has yet to be shown conclusively. Here we report an experimental test of the Wiedemann–Franz law in the normal state of a copper-oxide superconductor, (Pr,Ce)2CuO4, which reveals that the elementary excitations that carry heat in this material are not fermions. This is compelling evidence for the breakdown of Fermi-liquid theory in high-temperature superconductors.
Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics | 2010
Louis Taillefer
The origin of the exceptionally strong superconductivity of cuprates remains a subject of debate after more than two decades of investigation. Here we follow a new lead: The onset temperature for superconductivity scales with the strength of the anomalous normal-state scattering that makes the resistivity linear in temperature. The same correlation between linear resistivity and Tc is found in organic superconductors, for which pairing is known to come from fluctuations of a nearby antiferromagnetic phase, and in pnictide superconductors, for which an antiferromagnetic scenario is also likely. In the cuprates, the question is whether the pseudogap phase plays the corresponding role, with its fluctuations responsible for pairing and scattering. We review recent studies that shed light on this phase—its boundary, its quantum critical point, and its broken symmetries. The emerging picture is that of a phase with spin-density-wave order and fluctuations, in broad analogy with organic, pnictide, and heavy-fermion superconductors.
Physical Review B | 2003
M. Sutherland; D. G. Hawthorn; R. W. Hill; F. Ronning; S. Wakimoto; H. Zhang; Cyril Proust; Etienne Boaknin; Christian Lupien; Louis Taillefer; Ruixing Liang; D. A. Bonn; W. N. Hardy; R. Gagnon; Nigel E. Hussey; Tsuyoshi Kimura; M. Nohara; Hidenori Takagi
Heat transport in the cuprate superconductors