4,397 research outputs found
Polaron effects on the dc- and ac-tunneling characteristics of molecular Josephson junctions
We study the interplay of polaronic effect and superconductivity in transport
through molecular Josephson junctions. The tunneling rates of electrons are
dominated by vibronic replicas of the superconducting gap, which show up as
prominent features in the differential conductance for the dc and ac current.
For relatively large molecule-lead coupling, a features that appears when the
Josephson frequency matches the vibron frequency can be identified with an
over-the-gap structure observed by Marchenkov et al. [Nat. Nanotech. 2, 481
(2007)]. However, we are more concerned with the weak-coupling limit, where
resonant tunneling through the molecular level dominates. We find that certain
features involving both Andreev reflection and vibron emission show an unusual
shift of the bias voltage V at their maximum with the gate voltage V_g as V ~
(2/3) V_g. Moreover, due to the polaronic effect, the ac Josephson current
shows a phase shift of pi when the bias eV is increased by one vibronic energy
quantum hbar omega_v. This distinctive even-odd effect is explained in terms of
the different sign of the coupling to vibrons of electrons and of
Andreev-reflected holes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Liquid antiferromagnets in two dimensions
It is shown that, for proper symmetry of the parent lattice,
antiferromagnetic order can survive in two-dimensional liquid crystals and even
isotropic liquids of point-like particles, in contradiction to what common
sense might suggest. We discuss the requirements for antiferromagnetic order in
the absence of translational and/or orientational lattice order. One example is
the honeycomb lattice, which upon melting can form a liquid crystal with
quasi-long-range orientational and antiferromagnetic order but short-range
translational order. The critical properties of such systems are discussed.
Finally, we draw conjectures for the three-dimensional case.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 4 figures include
Theory for Magnetism and Triplet Superconductivity in LiFeAs
Superconducting pnictides are widely found to feature spin-singlet pairing in
the vicinity of an antiferromagnetic phase, for which nesting between electron
and hole Fermi surfaces is crucial. LiFeAs differs from the other pnictides by
(i) poor nesting properties and (ii) unusually shallow hole pockets.
Investigating magnetic and pairing instabilities in an electronic model that
incorporates these differences, we find antiferromagnetic order to be absent.
Instead we observe almost ferromagnetic fluctuations which drive an instability
toward spin-triplet p-wave superconductivity.Comment: Published versio
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