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      Evidence for a quantum phase transition in electron-doped\({\mathrm{Pr}}_{2-x}{\mathrm{Ce}}_{x}\mathrm{Cu}{\mathrm{O}}_{4-\delta }\)from thermopower measurements

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      Physical Review B
      American Physical Society (APS)

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          The doping dependence of T* – what is the real high-Tc phase diagram?

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            Spin entropy as the likely source of enhanced thermopower in Na(x)Co2O4.

            In an electric field, the flow of electrons in a solid produces an entropy current in addition to the familiar charge current. This is the Peltier effect, and it underlies all thermoelectric refrigerators. The increased interest in thermoelectric cooling applications has led to a search for more efficient Peltier materials and to renewed theoretical investigation into how electron-electron interaction may enhance the thermopower of materials such as the transition-metal oxides. An important factor in this enhancement is the electronic spin entropy, which is predicted to dominate the entropy current. However, the crucial evidence for the spin-entropy term, namely its complete suppression in a longitudinal magnetic field, has not been reported until now. Here we report evidence for such suppression in the layered oxide Na(x)Co2O4, from thermopower and magnetization measurements in both longitudinal and transverse magnetic fields. The strong dependence of thermopower on magnetic field provides a rare, unambiguous example of how strong electron-electron interaction effects can qualitatively alter electronic behaviour in a solid. We discuss the implications of our finding--that spin-entropy dominates the enhancement of thermopower in transition-metal oxides--for the search for better Peltier materials.
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              Doping dependence of an n-type cuprate superconductor investigated by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy.

              We present an angle-resolved photoemission doping dependence study of the n-type cuprate superconductor Nd(2-x)Ce(x)CuO(4+/-delta), from the half-filled Mott insulator to the T(c) = 24 K superconductor. In Nd2CuO4, we reveal the charge-transfer band for the first time. As electrons are doped into the system, this feature's intensity decreases with the concomitant formation of near- E(F) spectral weight. At low doping, the Fermi surface is an electron-pocket (with volume approximately x) centered at (pi,0). Further doping leads to the creation of a new holelike Fermi surface (volume approximately 1+x) centered at (pi,pi). These findings shed light on the Mott gap, its doping evolution, as well as the anomalous transport properties of the n-type cuprates.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                PRBMDO
                Physical Review B
                Phys. Rev. B
                American Physical Society (APS)
                1098-0121
                1550-235X
                January 2007
                January 4 2007
                : 75
                : 2
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevB.75.020506
                1e7f7a3a-3c87-4017-a8f1-5b1e596bc481
                © 2007

                http://link.aps.org/licenses/aps-default-license

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