Published in

National Academy of Sciences, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 30(120), 2023

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2302099120

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Discovery of charge order in a cuprate Mott insulator

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Preprint: archiving forbidden
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Postprint: archiving allowed
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Published version: archiving forbidden
Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Copper oxide superconductors universally exhibit multiple forms of electronically ordered phases that break the native translational symmetry of the CuO 2 planes. In underdoped cuprates with correlated metallic ground states, charge/spin stripes and incommensurate charge density waves (CDWs) have been experimentally observed over the years, while early theoretical studies also predicted the emergence of a Coulomb-frustrated ‘charge crystal’ phase in the very lightly doped, insulating limit of CuO 2 planes. Here, we search for signatures of CDW order in very lightly hole-doped cuprates from the 123 family R Ba 2 Cu 3 O 7 − δ ( R BCO; R : Y or rare earth), by using resonant X-ray scattering, electron transport, and muon spin rotation measurements to resolve the electronic and magnetic ground states fully. Specifically, Pr is used to substitute Y at the R -site to systematically suppress the superconductivity and access the extremely low hole-doping regime of the cuprate phase diagram without changing the oxygen stoichiometry. X-ray scattering data taken on Pr-doped YBCO thin films reveal an in-plane CDW order that follows the same linear evolution of wave vector versus hole concentration as oxygen-underdoped YBCO but extends all the way to the insulating and magnetically ordered Mott limit. Combined with the recent observation of charge crystal phase on an insulating surface of Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8 + z , our results in R BCO suggest that this electronic symmetry breaking is universally present in very lightly doped CuO 2 planes. These findings bridge the gap between the Mott insulating state and the underdoped metallic state and underscore the prominent role that Coulomb-frustrated electronic phase separation plays among all cuprates.