A detailed phenomenology of low energy excitations is a crucial starting point for microscopic understanding of complex materials, such as the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. Because of its unique momentum-space discrimination, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) is ideally suited for this task in the cuprates, where emergent phases, particularly superconductivity and the pseudogap, have anisotropic gap structure in momentum space. We present a comprehensive doping-and temperaturedependence ARPES study of spectral gaps in Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8+δ , covering much of the superconducting portion of the phase diagram. In the ground state, abrupt changes in near-nodal gap phenomenology give spectroscopic evidence for two potential quantum critical points, p = 0.19 for the pseudogap phase and p = 0.076 for another competing phase. Temperature dependence reveals that the pseudogap is not static below T c and exists p > 0.19 at higher temperatures. Our data imply a revised phase diagram that reconciles conflicting reports about the endpoint of the pseudogap in the literature, incorporates phase competition between the superconducting gap and pseudogap, and highlights distinct physics at the edge of the superconducting dome.quantum materials | correlated electrons | laser ARPES T he momentum-resolved nature of angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) makes it a key probe of the cuprates, the interesting phases of which have anisotropic momentumspace structure (1-4): both the d-wave superconducting gap and the pseudogap above T c have a maximum at the antinode [AN, near (π, 0)] and are ungapped at the node, although the latter phase also exhibits an extended ungapped arc (5-8). Ordering phenomena often result in gapping of the quasiparticle spectrum, and distinct quantum states produce spectral gaps with characteristic temperature, doping, and momentum dependence. These phenomena were demonstrated by recent ARPES experiments that argued that the pseudogap is a distinct phase from superconductivity based on their unique phenomenology (8-15): the pseudogap dominates near the AN (8, 11), and its magnitude increases with underdoping (11, 12), whereas near-nodal (NN) gaps have a different doping dependence and can be attributed to superconductivity because they close at T c (8, 12). Previous measurements focused on AN or intermediate (IM) momenta, but laser-ARPES, with its superior resolution and enhanced statistics, allows for precise gap measurements near the node where the gap is smallest. Our work is unique in its attention to NN momenta using laser-ARPES, and we demonstrate, via a single technique, that three distinct quantum phases manifest in different NN phenomenology as a function of doping.
ResultsGaps at parallel cuts were determined by fitting symmetrized energy distribution curves (EDCs) at k F to a minimal model (16).The Fermi wavevector, k F , is defined by the minimum gap locus. Example spectra, raw and symmetrized EDCs at k F , and fits are shown for UD92 (underdoped, T c = 92) ...