University of California, Davis, USA1
Advanced Lightsource, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, USA2
University of Minnesota, USA3
Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, USA4
University of California, Berkeley, USA5
Rice University, USA6
The cuprate superconductors exhibit the highest ambient-pressure superconducting transition temperatures (Tc), and after more than three decades of extraordinary research activity, continue to pose formidable scientific challenges. A major experimental obstacle has been to distinguish universal phenomena from materials- or technique-dependent ones. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) measures momentum-dependent single-particle electronic excitations and has been invaluable in the endeavor to determine the anisotropic momentum-space properties of the cuprates. HgBa2CuO4+d (Hg1201) is a single-layer cuprate with a particularly high optimal Tc and a simple crystal structure; yet there exists little information from ARPES about the electronic properties of this model system. I will present recent ARPES studies of doping-, temperature-, and momentum-dependent systematics of near-nodal dispersion anomalies in Hg1201. The data reveal a hierarchy of three distinct energy scales which establish several universal phenomena, both in terms of connecting multiple experimental techniques for a single material, and in terms of connecting comparable spectral features in multiple structurally similar cuprates.
Keywords: Cuprates, ARPES