4 research outputs found
Magnetism, superconductivity, and pairing symmetry in Fe-based superconductors
We analyze antiferromagnetism and superconductivity in novel based
superconductors within the itinerant model of small electron and hole pockets
near and . We argue that the effective interactions in both
channels logarithmically flow towards the same values at low energies, {\it
i.e.}, antiferromagnetism and superconductivity must be treated on equal
footings. The magnetic instability comes first for equal sizes of the two
pockets, but looses to superconductivity upon doping. The superconducting gap
has no nodes, but changes sign between the two Fermi surfaces (extended s-wave
symmetry). We argue that the dependencies of the spin susceptibility and
NMR relaxation rate for such state are exponential only at very low , and
can be well fitted by power-laws over a wide range below .Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures. References added, the formula for the
susceptibility correcte
Nuclear magnetic relaxation and superfluid density in Fe-pnictide superconductors: An anisotropic \pm s-wave scenario
We discuss the nuclear magnetic relaxation rate and the superfluid density
with the use of the effective five-band model by Kuroki et al. [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 101, 087004 (2008)] in Fe-based superconductors. We show that a
fully-gapped anisotropic \pm s-wave superconductivity consistently explains
experimental observations. In our phenomenological model, the gaps are assumed
to be anisotropic on the electron-like \beta Fermi surfaces around the M point,
where the maximum of the anisotropic gap is about four times larger than the
minimum.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures; Submitted versio
Pairing symmetry and properties of iron-based high temperature superconductors
Pairing symmetry is important to indentify the pairing mechanism. The
analysis becomes particularly timely and important for the newly discovered
iron-based multi-orbital superconductors. From group theory point of view we
classified all pairing matrices (in the orbital space) that carry irreducible
representations of the system. The quasiparticle gap falls into three
categories: full, nodal and gapless. The nodal-gap states show conventional
Volovik effect even for on-site pairing. The gapless states are odd in orbital
space, have a negative superfluid density and are therefore unstable. In
connection to experiments we proposed possible pairing states and implications
for the pairing mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, 1 table, 2 figures, polished versio