Abstract:
The well-known strange behavior of superconductivity (SC) discovered by H K
Onnes evoked great curiosity and initiated a new chapter in the history of physics.
The theorists and experimentalists throughout the globe have been endeavoring to
understand this extraordinary phenomenon for many years. A phenomenological
theory, named as Ginzburg-Landau (GL) theory successfully explained most of the
aspects of superconductors in the vicinity of the transition temperature Tc. The
crucial insight of GL theory is the introduction of the complex order parameter in
the free energy expansion to describe the superconducting state. In this connection,
Bardeen-Cooper-Schrie er (BCS) theory has found one of the most successful theory
among the other theories in the conventional era, and this microscopic theory
explained several characteristics of di erent superconducting materials. However,
the major goal of the superconducting materials is to achieve the phenomenon of
SC at room temperature. The discovery of such high temperature superconductors
(HTS) is the prime requirement for today and future technology. This succeeded
into massive theoretical and experimental e orts to discover new HTS. In 1986, the
advent of high temperature superconductivity (HTSC) was heralded as a breakthrough
discovery with the development of cuprates like La2xSrxCuO4 (Tc = 37:5
K) and YBa2Cu3O7 (Tc = 92 K). These discovered superconductors initiated a
pursuit to discover HTS with a higher critical temperature. Various models have
been proposed to understand the mechanism of HTS. The evolution of the theory
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of HTSC of these superconductors and understanding of their dynamical behavior
became one of the foremost leading challenges, and the quest is still on.
The unit cell of HTS incorporates a large number of atoms or ions increasing the
possibility of many-body interactions. The dimensionality plays a signi cant role
in the mechanism of HTSC which drew the attention of many experimentalists as
well as of theorists to study the mechanism of HTS. The high-temperature cuprate
superconductor has a layered crystal structure which consists of conduction layers
as well as charge reservoir layers. Each copper atom in the conducting planes has
apical oxygen atoms which display the ample in
uence of anharmonicities as well as
the e ect of defects.
The study of phonons exhibits a central role in characterizing the many dynamical
properties of HTS which need to be studied to a satisfactory extent. The careful investigation
of anharmonicity is complicated from a theoretical point of view because
of an anharmonic disturbance is considerably signi cant at very low temperature.
The role of doping (impurity) in HTS play a crucial part to control the superconducting
properties of copper oxide crystals. Moreover, the in
uences of disorders
and defects can be thoroughly understood which extremely modify the frequency
(energy) spectrum and dynamical characteristics of crystals. The appearance of defects
and anharmonicities leads to signi cant modi cations to the density of states
in a crystal. Electron-phonon (ep) coupling is also a remarkable e ect for describing
the features of HTS. Several mechanisms to understand the strange phenomenon of
HTSC have been proposed that includes the formation of pairs known as Cooper
pairs or pairons (e-pairons and h-pairons) which is a consequence of electron or hole
pairing via weak to strong coupling phenomena also mediated by phonons. The role
of electrons and phonons appear to be relevant during the formation of pairons (or
Cooper pair) in the transition region, instead of heat transport. The ep-interactions
in HTS display phononic as well as electronic characteristics via the density of states.
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The density of states plays a pivotal role in the study of a large number of dynamical
properties; especially, the electronic and phononic heat capacities, thermal transport,
etc. of HTS. Remarkably, the evaluation of heat capacity provides a measure of
the strength of ep-coupling which may lead to prompt to understand the pairon
mechanism with profound insight in HTS.
In this dissertation, we have investigated renormalized phonon frequency spectrum,
the density of states of phonons and electrons, and the heat capacity of phonons and
electrons for La2xSrxCuO4 and YBa2Cu3O7 superconductor considering e ects
of anharmonicities, defects, ep-interactions in HTS in a new framework based on
the many-body quantum dynamics of electrons and phonons. This investigation
manifests a detailed theoretical approach to understand the underlying physics of
the phenomenon of HTSC. This investigation reports that these e ects are essential
and suitable for the estimations of the dynamical properties of HTS.
The organization of this thesis work is as follows:
Chapter 1 describes a brief overview of the historical advancements of SC and a
precise outline of recent developments in the area of SC. The motivation for present
research work with the state of art of the problem and the aspects of the theory has
presented brie
y to understand the outlay of this thesis.
Chapter 2 is devoted to the detailed description of the methodology. The new impurity
induced anharmonic electron-phonon problem has been theoretically dealt using
the many-body theory of Green's functions (GF). A model Hamiltonian (without
considering BCS Hamiltonian) consists of multi-phonon interactions viz. electrons,
phonons, electron-phonon, anharmonicities and defects to develop the double-time
thermodynamic GF theory of phonons and electrons. Born-Mayer-Huggins (BMH)
potential appears most suitable potential to study the dynamical properties of such
HTS and shows its signi cance in establishing the importance of anharmonicities as
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well as defects. The renormalized phonon frequency spectrum of La2xSrxCuO4 and
YBa2Cu3O7 HTS have been investigated in the new framework.
Chapter 3 deals with the evaluation of renormalized and generalized density of
states of phonons and electrons (RPDOS, REDOS, GPDOS, and GEDOS) have
been developed using Lehmann's representation. This theoretical approach extraordinarily
divides the RPDOS and GPDOS into diagonal and non-diagonal components
which chie
y depends on mass change parameter. The obtained results have
been utilized to investigate the renormalized and generalized DOS of phonons and
electrons for La2xSrxCuO4 and YBa2Cu3O7 . The theoretical investigations of
GPDOS and GEDOS with the variation of doping and temperature for both cuprate
superconductor has been reported.
Chapter 4 aims to investigate the anomalous behavior of the electronic heat capacity
(EHC) with the help of the RPDOS through the average electron energy of
the system. The present theory of EHC reports that it shows dependence on several
contributions due to doping (defects), anharmonicities, and ep-interactions. The
presence of ep-coupling constant in each term of EHC is an additional and unusual
feature of the present formulation. The variation of EHC for La2xSrxCuO4 and
YBa2Cu3O7 with temperature is reported. The e ects of doping and ep-coupling
constant on EHC for both HTS have been investigated carefully and discussed in
chapter 5.
Chapter 5 is dedicated to the theoretical estimation of the phononic heat capacity
(PHC) using the RPDOS via average lattice energy undertaking the e ects of defects,
anharmonicities, and ep-interactions. A unique feature of the present theory is
that PHC separates into diagonal and non-diagonal components. The obtained
results of total heat capacity for La2xSrxCuO4 and YBa2Cu3O7 HTS shows a
successful agreement between theory and experiment. The doping concentration
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and ep-coupling constant dependence on PHC and EHC have been investigated for
both HTS.
Chapter 6 is devoted to a concise summary of the thesis work onward including
the scope of this work. This chapter highlights the most valuable outcomes and
presents feasible ways of stimulating future perspectives.