Superconductors in strong electric field: Quantum Electrodynamics meets superconductivity
ORAL
Abstract
A static electric field has always been thought to play little role in the physics of ideal conductors, since the screening effects of mobile carriers prevent it from penetrating deep into the bulk of a metal. Very recently however, experimental evidence has been obtained which indicates that static electric fields can be used to manipulate the superconductive properties of metallic BCS superconducting thin films, weakening the critical current. I this talk I will show how possible explanations to this striking effect can be found relying on the analogy between Superconductivity and Quantum Electrodynamics noticed by Nambu and Ioana-Lasinio in the sixties. I will show that, following this parallelism, it is possible to predict a new phenomenon: the superconducting Schwinger effect. Secondly I will explain how this new microscopic effect can be connected to a modified Gizburg-Landau theory where additional couplings between electric field and the superconductive condesate are taken into account. Eventually I will connect these theoretical prediction to the experiments, proposing them as a possible explanation of the weakening of superconductivity due to an external electric field.
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Publication: 1) Phys.Rev.Lett. 126 (2021) 11, 117001<br>2) Phys.Rev.Res. 4 (2022) 3, 033211
Presenters
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Andrea Amoretti
University of Genova
Authors
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Andrea Amoretti
University of Genova
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Francesco Giazotto
CNR Scuola Normale Superiore, NEST, Instituto Nanoscienze-CNR and Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy
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Daniel K Brattan
École Polytechnique, Echole Polytechnique de Paris
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Ioannis Matthaiakakis
University of Genoa, INFN - Sezione di Genova
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Nicodemo Magnoli
I.N.F.N. - Sezione di Genova, University of Genoa
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Paolo Solinas
University of Genoa
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Luca Martinoia
University of Genoa, INFN - Sezione di Genova