A road map to understand the relation between the onset of the
superconducting state with the particular optimum heterogeneity in granular
superconductors is to study a Random Tranverse Ising Model on complex networks
with a scale-free degree distribution regularized by and exponential cutoff
p(k) \propto k^{-\gamma}\exp[-k/\xi]. In this paper we characterize in detail
the phase diagram of this model and its critical indices both on annealed and
quenched networks. To uncover the phase diagram of the model we use the tools
of heterogeneous mean-field calculations for the annealed networks and the most
advanced techniques of quantum cavity methods for the quenched networks. The
phase diagram of the dynamical process depends on the temperature T, the
coupling constant J and on the value of the branching ratio / where
k is the degree of the nodes in the network. For fixed value of the coupling
the critical temperature increases linearly with the branching ration which
diverges with the increasing cutoff value \xi or value of the \gamma exponent
\gamma< 3. This result suggests that the fractal disorder of the
superconducting material can be responsible for an enhancement of the
superconducting critical temperature. At low temperature and low couplings T<<1
and J<<1, instead, we observe a different behavior for annealed and quenched
networks. In the annealed networks there is no phase transition at zero
temperature while on quenched network we observe a Griffith phase dominated by
extremely rare events and a phase transition at zero temperature. The Griffiths
critical region, nevertheless, is decreasing in size with increasing value of
the cutoff \xi of the degree distribution for values of the \gamma exponents
\gamma< 3.Comment: (17 pages, 3 figures