96 research outputs found
Shape-resonant superconductivity in nanofilms: from weak to strong coupling
Ultrathin superconductors of different materials are becoming a powerful
platform to find mechanisms for enhancement of superconductivity, exploiting
shape resonances in different superconducting properties. Here we evaluate the
superconducting gap and its spatial profile, the multiple gap components, and
the chemical potential, of generic superconducting nanofilms, considering the
pairing attraction and its energy scale as tunable parameters, from weak to
strong coupling, at fixed electron density. Superconducting properties are
evaluated at mean field level as a function of the thickness of the nanofilm,
in order to characterize the shape resonances in the superconducting gap. We
find that the most pronounced shape resonances are generated for weakly coupled
superconductors, while approaching the strong coupling regime the shape
resonances are rounded by a mixing of the subbands due to the large energy gaps
extending over large energy scales. Finally, we find that the spatial profile,
transverse to the nanofilm, of the superconducting gap acquires a flat behavior
in the shape resonance region, indicating that a robust and uniform multigap
superconducting state can arise at resonance.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to the Proceedings of the Superstripes
2016 conferenc
Resonant and crossover phenomena in a multiband superconductor tuning the chemical potential near a band edge
Resonances in the superconducting properties, in a regime of crossover from
BCS to mixed Bose-Fermi superconductivity, are investigated in a two-band
superconductor where the chemical potential is tuned near the band edge of the
second mini-band generated by quantum confinement effects. The shape resonances
at T=0 in the superconducting gaps (belonging to the class of Feshbach-like
resonances) is manifested by interference effects in the superconducting gap at
the first large Fermi surface when the chemical potential is in the proximity
of the band edge of the second mini-band. The case of a superlattice of quantum
wells is considered and the amplification of the superperconducting gaps at the
3D-2D Fermi surface topological transition is clearly shown. The results are
found to be in good agreement with available experimental data on a
superlattice of honeycomb boron layers intercalated by Al and Mg spacer layers.Comment: 13 pages, 9 image
Pseudogap in fermionic density of states in the BCS-BEC crossover of atomic Fermi gases
We study pseudogap behaviors of ultracold Fermi gases in the BCS-BEC
crossover region. We calculate the density of states (DOS), as well as the
single-particle spectral weight, above the superfluid transition temperature
including pairing fluctuations within a -matrix approximation.
We find that DOS exhibits a pseudogap structure in the BCS-BEC crossover
region, which is most remarkable near the unitarity limit. We determine the
pseudogap temperature at which the pseudogap structure in DOS disappears.
We also introduce another temperature at which the BCS-like
double-peak structure disappears in the spectral weight. While one finds
in the BCS regime, becomes higher than in the
crossover and BEC regime. We also determine the pseudogap region in the phase
diagram in terms of temperature and pairing interaction.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Proceedings of QFS 200
Superfluid phase transition and strong-coupling effects in an ultracold Fermi gas with mass imbalance
We investigate the superfluid phase transition and effects of mass imbalance
in the BCS (Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer)-BEC (Bose-Einstein condensation)
crossover regime of an cold Fermi gas. We point out that the Gaussian
fluctuation theory developed by Nozi\`eres and Schmitt-Rink and the -matrix
theory, that are now widely used to study strong-coupling physics of cold Fermi
gases, give unphysical results in the presence of mass imbalance. To overcome
this problem, we extend the -matrix theory to include higher-order pairing
fluctuations. Using this, we examine how the mass imbalance affects the
superfluid phase transition. Since the mass imbalance is an important key in
various Fermi superfluids, such as K-Li Fermi gas mixture, exciton
condensate, and color superconductivity in a dense quark matter, our results
would be useful for the study of these recently developing superfluid systems.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, Proceedings of QFS-201
Incommensurate Charge Density Waves in the adiabatic Hubbard-Holstein model
The adiabatic, Holstein-Hubbard model describes electrons on a chain with
step interacting with themselves (with coupling ) and with a classical
phonon field \f_x (with coupling \l). There is Peierls instability if the
electronic ground state energy F(\f) as a functional of \f_x has a minimum
which corresponds to a periodic function with period , where
is the Fermi momentum. We consider irrational so that
the CDW is {\it incommensurate} with the chain. We prove in a rigorous way in
the spinless case, when \l,U are small and {U\over\l} large, that a)when
the electronic interaction is attractive there is no Peierls instability
b)when the interaction is repulsive there is Peierls instability in the
sense that our convergent expansion for F(\f), truncated at the second order,
has a minimum which corresponds to an analytical and periodic
\f_x. Such a minimum is found solving an infinite set of coupled
self-consistent equations, one for each of the infinite Fourier modes of
\f_x.Comment: 16 pages, 1 picture. To appear Phys. Rev.
An explanation for a universality of transition temperatures in families of copper oxide superconductors
A remarkable mystery of the copper oxide high-transition-temperature (Tc)
superconductors is the dependence of Tc on the number of CuO2 layers, n, in the
unit cell of a crystal. In a given family of these superconductors, Tc rises
with the number of layers, reaching a peak at n=3, and then declines: the
result is a bell-shaped curve. Despite the ubiquity of this phenomenon, it is
still poorly understood and attention has instead been mainly focused on the
properties of a single CuO2 plane. Here we show that the quantum tunnelling of
Cooper pairs between the layers simply and naturally explains the experimental
results, when combined with the recently quantified charge imbalance of the
layers and the latest notion of a competing order nucleated by this charge
imbalance that suppresses superconductivity. We calculate the bell-shaped curve
and show that, if materials can be engineered so as to minimize the charge
imbalance as n increases, Tc can be raised further.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. The version published in Natur
Pseudogap and spectral function from superconducting fluctuations to the bosonic limit
The crossover from weak to strong coupling for a three dimensional continuum
model of fermions interacting via an attractive contact potential is studied
above the superconducting critical temperature. The pair-fluctuation
propagator, the one-loop self-energy, and the spectral function are
investigated in a systematic way from the superconducting fluctuation regime
(weak coupling) to the bosonic regime (strong coupling). Analytic and numerical
results are reported. In the strong-coupling regime, where the pair fluctuation
propagator has bosonic character, two quite different peaks appear in the
spectral function, a broad one at negative frequencies and a narrow one at
positive frequencies. By decreasing coupling, the two-peak structure evolves
smoothly. In the weak-coupling regime, where the fluctuation propagator has
diffusive Ginzburg-Landau character, the overall line-shape of the spectral
function is more symmetric. The systematic analysis of the spectral function
identifies specific features which allow one to distinguish by ARPES whether a
system is in the weak- or strong-coupling regime. Connection of the results of
our analysis with the phenomenology of cuprate superconductors is also
attempted and rests on the recently introduced two-gap model.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figure
Pair excitations and parameters of state of imbalanced Fermi gases at finite temperatures
The spectra of low-lying pair excitations for an imbalanced two-component
superfluid Fermi gas are analytically derived within the path-integral
formalism taking into account Gaussian fluctuations about the saddle point. The
spectra are obtained for nonzero temperatures, both with and without imbalance,
and for arbitrary interaction strength. On the basis of the pair excitation
spectrum, we have calculated the thermodynamic parameters of state of cold
fermions and the first and second sound velocities. The parameters of pair
excitations show a remarkable agreement with the Monte Carlo data and with
experiment.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
d-wave superconductivity near charge instabilities
We investigate the symmetry of the superconducting order parameter in the
proximity of a phase-separation or of an incommensurate charge-density-wave
instability. The attractive effective interaction at small or intermediate
transferred momenta is singular near the instability. This strongly
-dependent interaction, together with a residual local repulsion between the
quasiparticles and an enhanced density of states for band structures
appropriate for the high temperature superconducting oxides, strongly favors
the formation of -wave superconductivity. The relative stability with
respect to superconductivity in the -wave channel is discussed in detail,
finding this latter hardly realized in the above conditions. The
superconducting temperature is mostly determined by the closeness to the
quantum critical point associated to the charge instability and displays a
stronger dependence on doping with respect to the simple proximity to a Van
Hove singularity. The relevance of this scenario and the generic agreement of
the resulting phase diagram with the properties displayed by high temperature
superconducting oxides is discussed.Comment: 1 revtex file and 12 postscript figure
From Majorana theory of atomic autoionization to Feshbach resonances in high temperature superconductors
The Ettore Majorana paper - Theory of incomplete P triplets- published in
1931, focuses on the role of selection rules for the non-radiative decay of two
electron excitations in atomic spectra, involving the configuration interaction
between discrete and continuum channels. This work is a key step for
understanding the 1935 work of Ugo Fano on the asymmetric lineshape of two
electron excitations and the 1958 Herman Feshbach paper on the shape resonances
in nuclear scattering arising from configuration interaction between many
different scattering channels. The Feshbach resonances are today of high
scientific interest in many different fields and in particular for ultracold
gases and high Tc superconductivity.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. Journal of Superconductivity and Novel Magnetism
to be publishe
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