论文标题
超速原子的费米子梯子中的磁介导的孔配对
Magnetically mediated hole pairing in fermionic ladders of ultracold atoms
论文作者
论文摘要
掺杂的抗铁磁铁中移动电荷载体的配对在非常规超导性的出现中起着关键作用。在这些密切相关的材料中,与常规超导体中的声子介导的相互作用相反,通常认为配对机制是由磁相关介导的。然而,对真实材料中潜在机制的确切理解仍然缺乏,并且在过去40年中一直在推动实验和理论研究。早期的理论研究确定了阶梯系统中掺杂剂之间结合的出现,尽管令人反感的相互作用,但理想化的理论玩具模型在阐明配对方面发挥了工具作用。在这里,我们意识到了这一长期的理论预测,并报告了由于量子气体显微镜设置中磁相关引起的孔配对的观察。通过工程化掺杂的抗铁磁梯子,具有混合维度耦合,我们抑制了在短长度上的孔的保利。这会导致结合能的急剧增加和成对尺寸的减小,使我们能够观察到一对主要占据相同梯子的孔。我们在甲甲基旋转能量的范围内找到了一个孔孔结合能,并且在增加掺杂时,我们观察到配对分布中的空间结构,表明绑定孔对之间的排斥。通过设计一种结合强大增强的构型,我们描述了一种新的策略,以提高超导性的临界温度。
Pairing of mobile charge carriers in doped antiferromagnets plays a key role in the emergence of unconventional superconductivity. In these strongly correlated materials, the pairing mechanism is often assumed to be mediated by magnetic correlations, in contrast to phonon-mediated interactions in conventional superconductors. A precise understanding of the underlying mechanism in real materials is, however, still lacking, and has been driving experimental and theoretical research for the past 40 years. Early theoretical studies established the emergence of binding among dopants in ladder systems, where idealised theoretical toy models played an instrumental role in the elucidation of pairing, despite repulsive interactions. Here, we realise this long-standing theoretical prediction and report on the observation of hole pairing due to magnetic correlations in a quantum gas microscope setting. By engineering doped antiferromagnetic ladders with mixed-dimensional couplings we suppress Pauli blocking of holes at short length scales. This results in a drastic increase in binding energy and decrease in pair size, enabling us to observe pairs of holes predominantly occupying the same rung of the ladder. We find a hole-hole binding energy on the order of the superexchange energy, and, upon increased doping, we observe spatial structures in the pair distribution, indicating repulsion between bound hole pairs. By engineering a configuration in which binding is strongly enhanced, we delineate a novel strategy to increase the critical temperature for superconductivity.