140,137 research outputs found
Mesoscopic Phase Separation in Anisotropic Superconductors
General properties of anisotropic superconductors with mesoscopic phase
separation are analysed. The main conclusions are as follows: Mesoscopic phase
separation can be thermodynamically stable only in the presence of repulsive
Coulomb interactions. Phase separation enables the appearance of
superconductivity in a heterophase sample even if it were impossible in
pure-phase matter. Phase separation is crucial for the occurrence of
superconductivity in bad conductors. Critical temperature for a mixture of
pairing symmetries is higher than the critical temperature related to any pure
gap-wave symmetry of this mixture. In bad conductors, the critical temperature
as a function of the superconductivity fraction has a bell shape. Phase
separation makes the single-particle energy dispersion softer. For planar
structures phase separation suppresses d-wave superconductivity and enhances
s-wave superconductivity. These features are in agreement with experiments for
cuprates.Comment: Revtex file, 25 pages, 2 figure
Coexistence of Ferromagnetism and Superconductivity in Noncentrosymmetric Materials with Cubic Symmetry
This is a model study for the emergence of superconductivity in
ferromagnetically ordered phases of cubic materials whose crystal structure
lacks inversion symmetry. A Ginzburg-Landau-type theory is used to find the
ferromagnetic state and to determine the coupling of magnetic order to
superconductivity. It is found that noncentrosymmetricity evokes a helical
magnetic phase. If the wavelength of the magnetic order is long enough, it
gives rise to modulations of the order parameter of superconductivity, both in
modulus and complex phase. At magnetic domain walls the nucleation of
superconductivity is found to be suppressed as compared to the interior of
ferromagnetic domains.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Materials and mechanisms of hole superconductivity
The theory of hole superconductivity proposes that there is a single
mechanism of superconductivity that applies to all superconducting materials.
This paper discusses several material families where superconductivity occurs
and how they can be understood within this theory. Materials discussed include
the elements, transition metal alloys, high cuprates both hole-doped and
electron-doped, , iron pnictides, doped semiconductors, and elements
under high pressure.Comment: published version, small changes from v
Superconductivity in pressurized CeRhGe3 and related non-centrosymmetric compounds
We report the discovery of superconductivity in pressurized CeRhGe3, until
now the only remaining non-superconducting member of the isostructural family
of non-centrosymmetric heavy-fermion compounds CeTX3 (T = Co, Rh, Ir and X =
Si, Ge). Superconductivity appears in CeRhGe3 at a pressure of 19.6 GPa and the
transition temperature Tc reaches a maximum value of 1.3 K at 21.5 GPa. This
finding provides an opportunity to establish systematic correlations between
superconductivity and materials properties within this family. Though
ambient-pressure unit-cell volumes and critical pressures for superconductivity
vary substantially across the series, all family members reach a maximum Tcmax
at a common critical cell volume Vcrit, and Tcmax at Vcrit increases with
increasing spin-orbit coupling strength of the d-electrons. These correlations
show that substantial Kondo hybridization and spin-orbit coupling favor
superconductivity in this family, the latter reflecting the role of broken
centro-symmetry.Comment: 15 pages and 4 figure
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