Publications by authors named "Hirofumi Sakakibara"

Inspired by a recent experiment showing that La_{3}Ni_{2}O_{7} exhibits high T_{c} superconductivity under high pressure, we theoretically revisit the possibility of superconductivity in this material. We find that superconductivity can take place, which is somewhat similar to that of the bilayer Hubbard model consisting of the Ni 3d_{3z^{2}-r^{2}} orbitals. Although the coupling with the 3d_{x^{2}-y^{2}} orbitals degrades superconductivity, T_{c} can still be high enough to understand the experiment thanks to the very high T_{c} reached in the bilayer Hubbard model.

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Understanding the various competing phases in cuprate superconductors is a long-standing challenging problem. Recent studies have shown that orbital degrees of freedom, both Cuorbitals and Oorbitals, are a key ingredient for a unified understanding of cuprate superconductors, including the material dependence. Here we investigate a four-bandd-pmodel derived from the first-principles calculations with the variational Monte Carlo method, which allows us to elucidate competing phases on an equal footing.

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The distributions are analysed of the bond lengths between cations and anions in nitrides, oxides and fluorides for which structural data are available in the Crystallography Open Database (https://www.crystallography.net/cod/).

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Effective models are constructed for a newly discovered superconductor (Nd,Sr)NiO_{2}, which has been considered as a possible nickelate analog of the cuprates. Estimation of the effective interaction, which turns out to require a multiorbital model that takes account of all the orbitals involved on the Fermi surface, shows that the effective interactions are significantly larger than in the cuprates. A fluctuation exchange study suggests occurrence of d_{x^{2}-y^{2}}-wave superconductivity, where the transition temperature should be lowered from the cuprates due to the larger interaction.

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Many important questions for high-Tc cuprates are closely related to the insulating nature of parent compounds. While there has been intensive discussion on this issue, all arguments rely strongly on, or are closely related to, the correlation strength of the materials. Clear understanding has been seriously hampered by the absence of a direct measure of this interaction, traditionally denoted by U.

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In order to explore the reason why the single-layered cuprates, La(2-x)(Sr/Ba)(x)CuO4 (T(c)≃40  K) and HgBa2CuO(4+δ) (T(c)≃90  K) have such a significant difference in T(c), we study a two-orbital model that incorporates the d(z2) orbital on top of the d(x2-y2) orbital. It is found, with the fluctuation exchange approximation, that the d(z2) orbital contribution to the Fermi surface, which is stronger in the La system, works against d-wave superconductivity, thereby dominating over the effect of the Fermi surface shape. The result resolves the long-standing contradiction between the theoretical results on Hubbard-type models and the experimental material dependence of T(c) in the cuprates.

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