1,481 research outputs found
Critical temperature and giant isotope effect in presence of paramagnons
We reconsider the long-standing problem of the effect of spin fluctuations on
the critical temperature and isotope effect in a phonon-mediated
superconductor. Although the general physics of the interplay between phonons
and paramagnons had been rather well understood, the existing approximate
formulas fail to describe the correct behavior of for general phonon
and paramagnon spectra. Using a controllable approximation, we derive an
analytical formula for which agrees well with exact numerical solutions
of the Eliashberg equations for a broad range of parameters. Based on both
numerical and analytical results, we predict a strong enhancement of the
isotope effect when the frequencies of spin fluctuation and phonons are of the
same order. This effect may have important consequences for near-magnetic
superconductors such as MgCNiComment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Field-Dependent Critical Current in Type-II Superconducting Strips: Combined Effect of Bulk Pinning and Geometrical Edge Barrier
Recent theoretical and experimental research on low-bulk-pinning
superconducting strips has revealed striking dome-like magnetic-field
distributions due to geometrical edge barriers. The observed magnetic-flux
profiles differ strongly from those in strips in which bulk pinning is
dominant. In this paper we theoretically describe the current and field
distributions of a superconducting strip under the combined influence of both a
geometrical edge barrier and bulk pinning at the strip's critical current Ic,
where a longitudinal voltage first appears. We calculate Ic and find its
dependence upon a perpendicular applied magnetic field Ha. The behavior is
governed by a parameter p, defined as the ratio of the bulk-pinning critical
current Ip to the geometrical-barrier critical current Is0. We find that when p
> 2/pi and Ip is field-independent, Ic vs Ha exhibits a plateau for small Ha,
followed by the dependence Ic-Ip ~ 1/Ha in higher magnetic fields.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Fig. 1 revised, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Ab initio calculations of the physical properties of transition metal carbides and nitrides and possible routes to high-Tc
Ab initio linear-response calculations are reported of the phonon spectra and
the electron-phonon interaction for several transition metal carbides and
nitrides in a NaCl-type structure. For NbC, the kinetic, optical, and
superconducting properties are calculated in detail at various pressures and
the normal-pressure results are found to well agree with the experiment.
Factors accounting for the relatively low critical temperatures Tc in
transition metal compounds with light elements are considered and the possible
ways of increasing Tc are discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
Metallic ground state and glassy transport in single crystalline URhGe: Enhancement of disorder effects in a strongly correlated electron system
We present a detailed study of the electronic transport properties on a
single crystalline specimen of the moderately disordered heavy fermion system
URhGe. For this material, we find glassy electronic transport in a
single crystalline compound. We derive the temperature dependence of the
electrical conductivity and establish metallicity by means of optical
conductivity and Hall effect measurements. The overall behavior of the
electronic transport properties closely resembles that of metallic glasses,
with at low temperatures an additional minor spin disorder contribution. We
argue that this glassy electronic behavior in a crystalline compound reflects
the enhancement of disorder effects as consequence of strong electronic
correlations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Signatures of Quantum Chaos and fermionization in the incoherent transport of bosonic carriers in the Bose-Hubbard chain
We analyse the stationary current of Bose particles across the Bose-Hubbard
chain connected to a battery, focusing on the effect of inter-particle
interactions. It is shown that the current magnitude drastically decreases as
the strength of inter-particle interactions exceeds the critical value which
marks the transition to quantum chaos in the Bose-Hubbard Hamiltonian. We found
that this transition is well reflected in the non-equilibrium many-body density
matrix of the system. Namely, the level-spacing distribution for eigenvalues of
the density matrix changes from Poisson to Wigner-Dyson distributions. With the
further increase of the interaction strength, the Wigner-Dyson spectrum
statistics changes back to the Poisson statistics which now marks
fermionization of the bosonic particles. With respect to the stationary
current, this leads to the counter-intuitive dependence of the current
magnitude on the particle number.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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