Altermagnetic spin splitting selects direction-selective triplet pairing in 2D d-wave metals and generates spin-locked Majorana edge states in both spin-conserving and Rashba-mixed regimes.
Inherent momentum-dependent gap structure of altermagnetic superconductors
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abstract
Altermagnetic metals break time-reversal symmetry and feature spin-split Fermi surfaces generated by compensated N\'eel-ordered collinear magnetic moments. Being metallic, such altermagnets may undergo a further instability at low temperatures to a superconducting state, and it is an interesting open question what the salient features are of such altermagnetic superconductors. We address this question on the basis of realistic microscopic models that capture the altermagnetic sublattice degrees of freedom. We find that the sublattice structure can strongly affect the superconducting gap structure in altermagnetic superconductors. In particular, it imposes nodes in the gap on the Brillouin zone edges for superconductors stabilized by momentum-independent bare attraction channels. We contrast this to the case of superconductivity generated by extended range interactions where pairing is allowed on the Brillouin zone edges and both spin-singlet and equal-spin-pairing triplet states can be stabilized. Equal-spin-pairing triplet superconductivity is generically favored in the limit of large altermagnetic spin splitting of the bands compared to the superconducting gap scale, and features characteristic nonunitary properties arising from the altermagnetic order.
fields
cond-mat.supr-con 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Direction-selective triplet pairing and spin-edge locking in altermagnetic metals
Altermagnetic spin splitting selects direction-selective triplet pairing in 2D d-wave metals and generates spin-locked Majorana edge states in both spin-conserving and Rashba-mixed regimes.