Superconductivity in Ultra-Low Density Dirac Materials Driven by a Ferroelectric Quantum Critical Point
Invited
Abstract
According to standard lore, low-density materials such as semimetals should not become superconducting. They are characterized by a small Fermi energy, which is comparable to the Debye frequency and moreover, their density of states is extremely small. Nonetheless, superconductivity is ubiquitous in topological materials, including YPtBi, Bi2Se3, Bi, Cd3As2, PbTe and SnTe, which raise the question regarding the microscopic picture of pairing in these systems. In this talk, I will discuss the option of pairing mediated by ferroelectric fluctuations close to a quantum critical point in a Dirac semimetal. I will show that such fluctuations lead to pairing, even when the Fermi energy is smaller than any bosonic frequency in the problem and possibly, even at charge neutrality.
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Presenters
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Jonathan Ruhman
Physics, Bar Ilan University, Bar Ilan University
Authors
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Jonathan Ruhman
Physics, Bar Ilan University, Bar Ilan University
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Vladyslav Kozii
Condensed Matter Physics, Berkeley, University of California, Berkeley, Physics, University of California, Berkeley, Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley
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Zhen Bi
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology