1,750 research outputs found
Hybridization-induced superconductivity from the electron repulsion on a tetramer lattice having a disconnected Fermi surface
Plaquette lattices with each unit cell containing multiple atoms are good
candidates for disconnected Fermi surfaces, which are shown by Kuroki and Arita
to be favorable for spin-flucutation mediated superconductivity from electron
repulsion. Here we find an interesting example in a tetramer lattice where the
structure within each unit cell dominates the nodal structure of the gap
function. We trace its reason to the way in which a Cooper pair is formed
across the hybridized molecular orbitals, where we still end up with a T_c much
higher than usual.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
A quantum Monte Carlo study on the superconducting Kosterlitz-Thouless transition of the attractive Hubbard model on a triangular lattice
We study the superconducting Kosterlitz-Thouless transition of the attractive
Hubbard model on a two-dimensional triangular lattice using auxiliary field
quantum Monte Carlo method for system sizes up to sites.
Combining three methods to analyze the numerical data, we find, for the
attractive interaction of , that the transition temperature stays almost
constant within the band filling range of , while it is found to
be much lower in the region.Comment: RevTeX 6 page
Possible high superconductivity mediated by antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations in systems with Fermi surface pockets
We propose that if there are two small pocket-like Fermi surfaces, and the
spin susceptibility is pronounced around a wave vector {\bf Q} that bridges the
two pockets, the spin-singlet superconductivity mediated by spin fluctuations
may have a high transition temperature. Using the fluctuation exchange
approximation, this idea is confirmed for the Hubbard on a lattice with
alternating hopping integrals, for which is estimated to be almost an
order of magnitude larger than those for systems with a large connected Fermi
surface.Comment: 5 pages, uses RevTe
Treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer
Ovarian cancer is the third most common gynecologic malignancy worldwide but accounts for the highest mortality rate among these cancers. A stepwise approach to assessment, diagnosis, and treatment is vital to appropriate management of this disease process. An integrated approach with gynecologic oncologists as well as medical oncologists, pathologists, and radiologists is of paramount importance to improving outcomes. Surgical cytoreduction to R0 is the mainstay of treatment, followed by adjuvant chemotherapy. Genetic testing for gene mutations that affect treatment is the standard of care for all women with epithelial ovarian cancer. Nearly all women will have a recurrence, and the treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer continues to be nuanced and requires extensive review of up to date modalities that balance efficacy with the patient\u27s quality of life. Maintenance therapy with poly ADP-ribose polymerase inhibitors, bevacizumab, and/or drugs targeting homologous recombination deficiency is becoming more widely used in the treatment of ovarian cancer, and the advancement of immunotherapy is further revolutionizing treatment targets
Three-orbital study on the orbital distillation effect in the high Tc cuprates
Our recent study has revealed that the mixture of the dz2 orbital component
into the Fermi surface suppresses Tc in the cuprates such as La2CuO4. We have
also shown that applying hydrostatic pressure enhances Tc due to smaller mixing
of the Cu4s component. We call these the "orbital distillation" effect. In our
previous study, the 4s orbital was taken into account through the hoppings in
the dx2-y2 sector, but here we consider a model in which of the dx2-y2, dz2 and
4s orbitals are all considered explicitly. The present study reinforces our
conclusion that smaller 4s hybridization further enhances Tc.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted as a proceeding of ISS2012(Tokyo
Competition between singlet and triplet pairings in Na_xCoO_2 yH_2O
We discuss the pairing symmetry of a cobaltate superconductor
NaCoO HO by adopting an effective single band model that
takes into account the hole pockets, as discussed in our previous paper
[to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett.] Here we consider the off-site repulsions in
addition to the on-site repulsion considered in our previous study. We show
that the spin-triplet f-wave pairing proposed in our previous study is robust
to some extent even in the presence of off-site repulsions. However, f-wave
pairing gives way to singlet pairings for sufficiently large values of off-site
repulsions. Among the singlet pairings, i-wave and extended s-wave pairings are
good candidates which do not break time reversal symmetry below in
agreement with the experiments.Comment: 12 page
Enhancement of the d_{x^2-y^2} pairing correlation in the two-dimensional Hubbard model: a quantum Monte Carlo study
Quantum Monte Carlo is used to investigate the possibility of d_{x^2-y^2}
superconductivity in the two-dimensional repulsive Hubbard model. A small
energy scale relevant to possible pairing requires a care (i.e., sufficiently
small level separation between the points and
with small 's) to detect enhanced
correlations in finite-size studies, as motivated from a previous study on
Hubbard ladders. Our calculation indeed detects long-tailed enhancements in the
d_{x^2-y^2} pairing correlation when the system is near, but not exactly at,
half-filling.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, uses epsf.sty and multicol.st
Superconductivity and spin correlation in organic conductors: a quantum Monte Carlo study
The d-wave pairing correlations along with spin correlation are calculated
with quantum Monte Carlo method for the two-dimensional Hubbard model on
lattice structures representing organic superconductors
-(BEDT-TTF)X and (TMTSF)X. In both cases the pairing
correlations for superconducting order parameters with nodes are found to be
enhanced. The symmetry and the enhancement of the pairing is systematically
correlated with the spin structure factor, suggesting a spin-fluctuation
mediated pairing. We have further found that, as we deform the Fermi surface to
make the system approach the half-filled square lattice, the coherence of the
pairing saturates while the local pairing amplitude continues to increase.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX, uses epsf.sty and multicol.st
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