$d$-wave bond-order charge excitations in electron-doped cuprates (1506.06853v3)
Abstract: We study charge excitation spectra in the two-dimensional $t$-$J$ model on a square lattice to explore a charge-order tendency recently found in electron-doped cuprates around the carrier density 0.15. The static susceptibility of $d$-wave charge density, which corresponds to the nematic susceptibility at the momentum transfer ${\bf q}=(0,0)$, shows two characteristic peaks at momenta of the form ${\bf q}{1}=(q',q')$ and ${\bf q}{2}=(q,0)$. These two peaks originate from the so-called $2k_{F}$ scattering processes enhanced by the $d$-wave character of the bond-charge density. The peak at ${\bf q}{1}$ is much broader, but develop to be very sharp in the vicinity of its instability, whereas the peak at ${\bf q}{2}$ becomes sharper with decreasing temperature, but does not diverge. The equal-time correlation function, which is measured by resonant x-ray scattering, exhibits a momentum dependence similar to the static susceptibility. We also present energy-resolved charge excitation spectra. The spectra show a V-shaped structure around ${\bf q}=(0,0)$ and bend back toward close to zero energy due to the charge-order tendency at ${\bf q}{1}$ and ${\bf q}{2}$. The resulting spectra form gap-like features with a maximal gap at ${\bf q} \approx {\bf q}{1}/2$ and ${\bf q}{2}/2$. We discuss implications for the recent experiments in electron-doped cuprates.