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Dive into the research topics where Y. F. Kung is active.

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Featured researches published by Y. F. Kung.


Nature Communications | 2012

Phase fluctuations and the absence of topological defects in a photo-excited charge-ordered nickelate

W. S. Lee; Yi-De Chuang; R. G. Moore; Yiwen Zhu; L. Patthey; M. Trigo; D. H. Lu; Patrick S. Kirchmann; O. Krupin; M. Yi; M. C. Langner; Nils Huse; Y. Chen; Shuyun Zhou; G. Coslovich; Bernhard Huber; David A. Reis; Robert A. Kaindl; Robert W. Schoenlein; D. Doering; Peter Denes; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; S. L. Johnson; Michael Först; T. Sasagawa; Y. F. Kung; A. P. Sorini; A. F. Kemper; Brian Moritz

The dynamics of an order parameters amplitude and phase determines the collective behaviour of novel states emerging in complex materials. Time- and momentum-resolved pump-probe spectroscopy, by virtue of measuring material properties at atomic and electronic time scales out of equilibrium, can decouple entangled degrees of freedom by visualizing their corresponding dynamics in the time domain. Here we combine time-resolved femotosecond optical and resonant X-ray diffraction measurements on charge ordered La(1.75)Sr(0.25)NiO(4) to reveal unforeseen photoinduced phase fluctuations of the charge order parameter. Such fluctuations preserve long-range order without creating topological defects, distinct from thermal phase fluctuations near the critical temperature in equilibrium. Importantly, relaxation of the phase fluctuations is found to be an order of magnitude slower than that of the order parameters amplitude fluctuations, and thus limits charge order recovery. This new aspect of phase fluctuations provides a more holistic view of the phases importance in ordering phenomena of quantum matter.


Nature Communications | 2014

Persistent spin excitations in doped antiferromagnets revealed by resonant inelastic light scattering

Chunjing Jia; E. A. Nowadnick; Krzysztof Wohlfeld; Y. F. Kung; Cheng-Chien Chen; S. Johnston; Takami Tohyama; Brian Moritz; T. P. Devereaux

How coherent quasiparticles emerge by doping quantum antiferromagnets is a key question in correlated electron systems, whose resolution is needed to elucidate the phase diagram of copper oxides. Recent resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) experiments in hole-doped cuprates have purported to measure high-energy collective spin excitations that persist well into the overdoped regime and bear a striking resemblance to those found in the parent compound, challenging the perception that spin excitations should weaken with doping and have a diminishing effect on superconductivity. Here we show that RIXS at the Cu L3-edge indeed provides access to the spin dynamical structure factor once one considers the full influence of light polarization. Further we demonstrate that high-energy spin excitations do not correlate with the doping dependence of Tc, while low-energy excitations depend sensitively on doping and show ferromagnetic correlations. This suggests that high-energy spin excitations are marginal to pairing in cuprate superconductors.


Physical Review B | 2016

Characterizing the three-orbital Hubbard model with determinant quantum Monte Carlo

Y. F. Kung; Chia-I Chen; Yao Wang; Edwin W. Huang; E. A. Nowadnick; Brian Moritz; R. T. Scalettar; S. Johnston; T. P. Devereaux

Here, we characterize the three-orbital Hubbard model using state-of-the-art determinant quantum Monte Carlo (DQMC) simulations with parameters relevant to the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. The simulations find that doped holes preferentially reside on oxygen orbitals and that the (π,π) antiferromagnetic ordering vector dominates in the vicinity of the undoped system, as known from experiments. The orbitally-resolved spectral functions agree well with photoemission spectroscopy studies and enable identification of orbital content in the bands. A comparison of DQMC results with exact diagonalization and cluster perturbation theory studies elucidates how these different numerical techniques complement one another to produce a more complete understanding of the model and the cuprates. Interestingly, our DQMC simulations predict a charge-transfer gap that is significantly smaller than the direct (optical) gap measured in experiment. Most likely, it corresponds to the indirect gap that has recently been suggested to be on the order of 0.8 eV, and demonstrates the subtlety in identifying charge gaps.


Physical Review B | 2015

Doping evolution of spin and charge excitations in the Hubbard model

Y. F. Kung; E. A. Nowadnick; Chunjing Jia; S. Johnston; Brian Moritz; R. T. Scalettar; T. P. Devereaux

We shed light on how electronic correlations vary across the phase diagram of the cuprate superconductors, examining the doping evolution of spin and charge excitations in the single-band Hubbard model using determinant quantum Monte Carlo (DQMC). In the single-particle response, we observe that the effects of correlations weaken rapidly with doping, such that one may expect the random phase approximation (RPA) to provide an adequate description of the two-particle response. In contrast, when compared to RPA, we find that significant residual correlations in the two-particle excitations persist up to 40% hole and 15% electron doping (the range of dopings achieved in the cuprates). Ultimately, these fundamental differences between the doping evolution of single- and multi-particle renormalizations show that conclusions drawn from single-particle processes cannot necessarily be applied to multi-particle excitations. Eventually, the system smoothly transitions via a momentum-dependent crossover into a weakly correlated metallic state where the spin and charge excitation spectra exhibit similar behavior and where RPA provides an adequate description.


Physical Review B | 2014

Numerical exploration of spontaneous broken symmetries in multiorbital Hubbard models

Y. F. Kung; Chia-I Chen; Brian Moritz; S. Johnston; Ronny Thomale; T. P. Devereaux

We study three proposals for broken symmetry in the cuprate pseudogap - oxygen antiferromagnetism,


Physical Review B | 2017

Numerically exploring the 1D-2D dimensional crossover on spin dynamics in the doped Hubbard model

Y. F. Kung; C. Bazin; Krzysztof Wohlfeld; Yao Wang; Chia-I Chen; Chunjing Jia; S. Johnston; Brian Moritz; F. Mila; T. P. Devereaux

\Theta_{II}


Physical Review B | 2013

Doping evolution of the oxygen K-edge x-ray absorption spectra of cuprate superconductors using a three-orbital Hubbard model

Cheng-Chien Chen; Michael Sentef; Y. F. Kung; Chunjing Jia; Ronny Thomale; Brian Moritz; Arno P. Kampf; T. P. Devereaux

orbital loop currents, and circulating currents involving apex oxygens - through numerical exploration of multi-orbital Hubbard models. Our numerically exact results show no evidence for the existence of oxygen antiferromagnetic order or the


Physical Review B | 2013

Time-dependent charge-order and spin-order recovery in striped systems

Y. F. Kung; W. S. Lee; Chia-I Chen; A. F. Kemper; A. P. Sorini; Brian Moritz; T. P. Devereaux

\Theta_{II}


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Real-Time Manifestation of Strongly Coupled Spin and Charge Order Parameters in Stripe-Ordered La1:75Sr0:25NiO4 Nickelate Crystals Using Time-Resolved Resonant X-Ray Diffraction

Yi-De Chuang; W. S. Lee; Y. F. Kung; A. P. Sorini; Brian Moritz; R. G. Moore; L. Patthey; M. Trigo; D. H. Lu; Patrick S. Kirchmann; M. Yi; O. Krupin; M. C. Langner; Yiwen Zhu; Shuyun Zhou; David A. Reis; Nils Huse; Robert A. Kaindl; Robert W. Schoenlein; S. L. Johnson; Michael Först; Dionisio Doering; Peter Denes; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; T. Sasagawa; Z. Hussain; Zhi-Xun Shen; T. P. Devereaux

phase in the three-orbital Hubbard model. The model also fails to sustain an ordered current pattern even with the presence of additional apex oxygen orbitals. We thereby conclude that it is difficult to stabilize the aforementioned phases in the multi-orbital Hubbard models for parameters relevant to cuprate superconductors. However, the


Physical Review B | 2017

Nonequilibrium lattice-driven dynamics of stripes in nickelates using time-resolved x-ray scattering

W. S. Lee; Y. F. Kung; Brian Moritz; G. Coslovich; Robert A. Kaindl; Y.-D. Chuang; R. G. Moore; D. H. Lu; Patrick S. Kirchmann; Michael P. Minitti; Georgi L. Dakovski; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; Simon Gerber; T. Sasagawa; Z. Hussain; Zhi-Xun Shen; T. P. Devereaux

\Theta_{II}

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Brian Moritz

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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T. P. Devereaux

Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials

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S. Johnston

University of Tennessee

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Chunjing Jia

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Chia-I Chen

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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W. S. Lee

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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A. P. Sorini

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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A. F. Kemper

North Carolina State University

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