In most superconductors, the transition to the superconducting state is driven by the binding of electrons into Cooper pairs [1]. The condensation of these pairs into a single, phase coherent, quantum state takes place at the same time as their formation at the transition temperature, . A different scenario occurs in some disordered, amorphous, superconductors: Instead of a pairing-driven transition, in-coherent Cooper pairs first pre-form above , causing the opening of a pseudogap, and then, at , condense into the phase coherent superconducting state [2-11]. Such a two-step scenario implies the existence of a new energy scale, Δ , driving the collective superconducting transition of the preformed pairs [2-6]. Here we unveil this energy scale by means of Andreev spectroscopy [5, 12] in superconducting thin films of amorphous indium oxide. We observe two Andreev conductance peaks at ± Δ that develop only below and for highly disordered films on the verge of the transition to insulator. Our findings demonstrate that amorphous superconducting films provide prototypical disordered quantum systems to explore the collective superfluid transition of preformed Cooper-pairs.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7617219PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41567-018-0365-8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cooper pairs
12
superconducting state
8
phase coherent
8
energy scale
8
transition preformed
8
transition
6
pairs
5
superconducting
5
collective energy
4
energy gap
4

Similar Publications

Transmembrane receptors that endow mammalian cells with the ability to sense and respond to biomaterial-bound ligands will prove instrumental in bridging the fields of synthetic biology and biomaterials. Materials formed with thiol-norbornene chemistry are amenable to thiol-peptide patterning, and this study reports the rational design of synthetic receptors that reversibly activate cellular responses based on peptide-ligand recognition. This transmembrane receptor platform, termed Extracellular Peptide-ligand Dimerization Actuator (EPDA), consists of stimulatory or inhibitory receptor pairs that come together upon extracellular peptide dimer binding with corresponding monobody receptors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Jordan-Wigner transformation permits one to convert spin 1/2 operators into spinless fermion ones, or vice versa. In some cases, it transforms an interacting spin Hamiltonian into a noninteracting fermionic one, which is exactly solved at the mean-field level. Even when the resulting fermionic Hamiltonian is interacting, its mean-field solution can provide surprisingly accurate energies and correlation functions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Cooper-pair distribution function Dcp(ω,Tc) of Untwisted-Misaligned Bilayer Graphene (UMBLG) in the presence of an external electric field is calculated and analysed within the framework of first-principle calculations. A bilayer graphene structure is proposed using a structural geometric approximation, enabling the simulation of a structure rotated at a small angle, avoiding a supercell calculation. The Dcp(ω,Tc) function of UMBLG indicates the presence of the superconducting state for specific structural configurations, which is consistent with the superconductivity in Twisted Bilayer Graphene (TBLG) reported in the literature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The research explores how to trigger superconductivity in very thin semiconductor materials using excitons to create an effective attraction between electrons, expanding beyond traditional phonon-mediated superconductivity.
  • By including interactions related to trions, the study shows that the electron-exciton interaction varies significantly with frequency and momentum, leading to a transition between weakly bound Cooper pairs and a superfluid state of bipolarons.
  • Despite the complexity of strong-coupling conditions, the resulting bipolarons are lightweight, allowing for critical temperatures that can reach up to 10% of the Fermi temperature, suggesting that two-dimensional material heterostructures could be valuable for achieving high-temperature superconductivity when electron doping and trion effects are optimized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Superconductivity emerges from the spatial coherence of a macroscopic condensate of Cooper pairs. Increasingly strong binding and localization of electrons into these pairs compromises the condensate's phase stiffness, thereby limiting critical temperatures - a phenomenon known as the BCS-BEC crossover in lattice systems. In this study, we demonstrate enhanced superconductivity in a multiorbital model of alkali-doped fullerides (AC) that goes beyond the limits of the lattice BCS-BEC crossover.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!