Abstract:
After one century of the historic landmark discovery of superconductivity by Heike
Kamerlingh Onnes (1911), now has grown a rich heritage in experimental as well
as in theoretical sectors. This journey has acquired several milestones during this
long period can be divided into two major segments, namely; Conventional superconductivity
period (1911-1985) and era of high temperature superconductivity (1986
and onwards). The era of conventional superconductivity includes the investigations;
namely: perfect diamagnetism and total expulsion of magnetic flux- Meissner and
Ochsenfeld effect (1933); two fluid model of Gorter and Casimir; isotope effect by
Maxwell and Reynolds et al.; London equations by F. and H. London (1934); phenomenological
‘macroscopic theory’ of superconductivity of Vitaly Ginzburg and Lev
Landau(1950); investigation of type-I and type-II superconductors and Abrikosov
(1957) Vortex formation; microscopic theory of superconductivity-BCS theory by
John Bardeen, Leon Cooper and Robert Schrieffer(1957); Correspondence between
GL theory and BCS theory by Lev Gorkov (1959); Josephson effect and various technological
applications of superconductors, e.g., magnetic levitation, superconducting
transformers, etc. The BCS theory appeared as a most successful theory which explained
the phenomenon of superconductivity.
New area of research started with the breakthrough discovery of first high temperai
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ture superconductor (cuprate superconductors) by Bednorz and Muller (1986). The
long awaited unique problem of anharmonic phonon-electron interactions in high temperature
superconductors attracted the physicist with the verity that anharmonicity
is responsible for many different dynamical properties of the solids. Some of the
proposed mechanisms of high temperature superconductivity considered that phonon
helps to join the two electrons into superconducting pairs (cooper pairs, bipolarons,
and pairons). Various remarkable conclusions shows that the anharmonicity less than
1% can induced superconductivity even in the presence of coulomb repulsion. A near
consensus to decide the building blocks to understand the high temperature superconductivity
has been emerged out as follows: (i) Dimensionality plays an important role
in the phenomenon of high temperature superconductivity. The action of conduction
occurs primarily in the Cu-O planes, which attracts the attention of experimental
as well as of theoretical physicist on the behavior of planar excitations and focus on
the two best studied systems, YBCO and LSCO. (ii) The presence of binding layers
(charge reservoir layers) provides a source for the hole doping in copper oxide planes.
The transition temperature and superconductivity depends upon the concentration
of holes. Material should be layered with one or more planes there should be a layer
that acts reservoir layer. The YBCO is the basic representative superconductor with
the unique dynamical properties of high temperature superconductors like thermal
properties, optical properties and electronic properties. The vibrations of apical oxygen
ions along c-direction shows influenced effect of defects and anharmonicity. The
discovery of high temperature superconductors in cuprates was actually inspired by
possible strong electron-phonon interaction in oxides owing to polaron formation or
in mixed valence systems. The theory of electrons interacting with harmonic phonons
studied by Migdal and Eliashberg leading to the description of superconductivity in
phonon mediated superconductors. Shortly after the discovery, several experiments
lead some people to believe that electron-phonon coupling may not be relevant to
high temperature superconductivity instead, strong electron-electron correlation has
been proposed to be the mechanism of high temperature superconductivity. Now
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to study the various dynamical properties of high temperature superconductors and
quantum dynamics of phonon and electron the Green’s function method of Zubarev
has been taken as the state of the art with almost a complete crystal Hamiltonian.
By using this method phonon density of states and electron density of states has been
studied with in a new frame work. It is observed that the theories of superconductivity
so far deal with the Hamiltonian which include (i) unperturbed phonon part,
(ii) the electron-phonon part and (iii) the BCS part. The complete picture of the
interactions cannot be accorded by mere consideration of these three and becomes impossible
to describe dynamical properties of high temperature superconductors with
a reasonable competence. Since the anharmonicity does not vanish even at ultra low
temperature and the localization effects due to the substitutional impurities change
the energy spectrum drastically. We have rarely come across the various theories
which simultaneously deal with the problem of anharmonicities as well as that of
impurities in the problem of superconductivity. This probed us to undertake the
study of dynamical properties of high temperature superconductors when the impurities,
anharmonicities and electron-phonon effects play a vital role in simultaneity.
The problem of anharmonic effects is a bit too complicated in simple solids and this
becomes more complex when the effects of defects are included. These effects in the
high temperature superconductors are not studied up to a satisfactory extent and
need to be explored and critically analyzed. Since the number of atoms per unit cell
in the superconducting systems is found large and hence the possibility of impurity
interaction as well as that of anharmonic interactions is quite large as compared to
the simple solids.
There pending a very interesting problem in the respect of Born-Mayer potential. We
see that in earlier theories the parameters of Born-Mayer potential has been taken
as constant, which is needs to be critically analyzed. Taking the anharmonic, defect
and electron-phonon contribution the infrared absorption also a very complicated and
unique problem. In this our work we have tried to solve both of the problems with
in a new frame work.