Nodal-line pairing with 1D-3D coupled Fermi surfaces: a model motivated by Cr-based superconductors
read the original abstract
Motivated by the recent discovery of a new family of Chromium based superconductors, we consider a two-band model, where a band of electrons dispersing only in one direction interacts with a band of electrons dispersing in all three directions. Strong $2k_f$ density fluctuations in the one-dimensional band induces attractive interactions between the three-dimensional electrons, which, in turn makes the system superconducting. Solving the associated Eliashberg equations, we obtain a gap function which is peaked at the "poles" of the three-dimensional Fermi sphere, and decreases towards the "equator". When strong enough local repulsion is included, the gap actually changes sign around the "equator" and nodal rings are formed. These nodal rings manifest themselves in several experimentally observable quantities, some of which resemble unconventional observations in the newly discovered superconductors which motivated this work.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.