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Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 107002 (2005) [4 pages]

Breakdown of One-Parameter Scaling in Quantum Critical Scenarios for High-Temperature Copper-Oxide Superconductors

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Philip Phillips
Loomis Laboratory of Physics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1110 W.Green St., Urbana, Illinois, 61801-3080, USA

Claudio Chamon
Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA

Received 8 December 2004; published 31 August 2005

We show that if the excitations which become gapless at a quantum critical point also carry the electrical current, then a resistivity linear in temperature, as is observed in the copper-oxide high-temperature superconductors, obtains only if the dynamical exponent z satisfies the unphysical constraint, z<0. At fault here is the universal scaling hypothesis that, at a continuous phase transition, the only relevant length scale is the correlation length. Consequently, either the electrical current in the normal state of the cuprates is carried by degrees of freedom which do not undergo a quantum phase transition, or quantum critical scenarios must forgo this basic scaling hypothesis and demand that more than a single-correlation length scale is necessary to model transport in the cuprates.

© 2005 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.95.107002
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.95.107002
PACS:
74.25.Fy, 74.20.−z, 74.72.−h