scholarly journals High temperature superconductivity in sulfur hydride under ultrahigh pressure: A complex superconducting phase beyond conventional BCS

2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Annette Bussmann-Holder ◽  
Jürgen Köhler ◽  
M.-H. Whangbo ◽  
Antonio Bianconi ◽  
Arndt Simon

AbstractThe recent report of superconductivity under high pressure at the record transition temperature of Tc =203 K in pressurized H2S has been identified as conventional in view of the observation of an isotope effect upon deuteration. Here it is demonstrated that conventional theories of superconductivity in the sense of BCS or Eliashberg formalisms cannot account for the pressure dependence of the isotope coefficient. The only way out of the dilemma is a multi-band approach of superconductivity where already small interband coupling suffices to achieve the high values of Tc together with the anomalous pressure dependent isotope coefficient. In addition, it is shown that anharmonicity of the hydrogen bonds vanishes under pressure whereas anharmonic phonon modes related to sulfur are still active.

2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 6717-6724
Author(s):  
Mingyang Du ◽  
Zihan Zhang ◽  
Hao Song ◽  
Hongyu Yu ◽  
Tian Cui ◽  
...  

The contribution of optical and acoustic modes to the superconducting transition temperature. The calculated EPC parameter λ, critical temperature (Tc), critical temperature caused by the interaction of electrons with optical phonons (T0c) and acoustic phonons (Tacc).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
James Glenn Storey

<p>The generic doping dependence of the thermodynamic, electrodynamic and transport properties of high-temperature superconductors remains a puzzle despite many years of study. We are still awaiting a rigorous scientific theory that explains the resistance-free flow of electric current in these novel materials. In conventional superconductors, observations of the predicted dependence of the superconducting transition temperature on isotopic mass played a key role in identifying a phononic pairing mechanism. In order to elucidate the role of phonons in the high-Tc superconductors, the oxygen isotope effect in the separate components of the penetration depth tensor of the high-temperature superconductor YBa2Cu4O8 was determined from AC susceptibility measurements, performed on biaxially-aligned powders set in epoxy. The results, extracted after assuming values for the upper cut-off radii in the particle size distributions, show that the isotope effect in the bc-plane is negligible compared to those of the ab- and ac-planes. This suggests that the electrons prefer to couple to phonon modes in which the motion of the atoms is perpendicular to the plane of transport. The electronic entropy, superfluid density, Raman response, spin susceptibility and thermoelectric power were calculated from energy-momentum dispersions determined by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). An excellent match with experimental data was obtained. This is a highly significant result because it provides the first comprehensive link between these bulk properties and the ARPES measurements which are dominated by the outermost CuO2 layer. Thus, in most respects surface effects do not appear to seriously modify or obscure the band structure which governs bulk properties. The calculations reveal the presence of a van Hove singularity (vHs) at the Fermi level (EF ) in the heavily overdoped regime to be a universal feature of the cuprates. The evolution of these properties with temperature and doping can be fully explained by the retreat of EF from the vHs and the opening of a normal state pseudogap as doping is decreased. Consequently, the pairing potential amplitude is found to be a strongly decreasing function of hole concentration, similar to the doping dependence of the exchange interaction, J. The pairing interaction is possibly a universal function of the EF â EvHs with the maximum in the transition temperature (Tc) governed by the exact magnitude of the density of states on the flanks of the vHs. These are key new discoveries which may provide a route forward to solving the puzzle of high-temperature superconductivity.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
James Glenn Storey

<p>The generic doping dependence of the thermodynamic, electrodynamic and transport properties of high-temperature superconductors remains a puzzle despite many years of study. We are still awaiting a rigorous scientific theory that explains the resistance-free flow of electric current in these novel materials. In conventional superconductors, observations of the predicted dependence of the superconducting transition temperature on isotopic mass played a key role in identifying a phononic pairing mechanism. In order to elucidate the role of phonons in the high-Tc superconductors, the oxygen isotope effect in the separate components of the penetration depth tensor of the high-temperature superconductor YBa2Cu4O8 was determined from AC susceptibility measurements, performed on biaxially-aligned powders set in epoxy. The results, extracted after assuming values for the upper cut-off radii in the particle size distributions, show that the isotope effect in the bc-plane is negligible compared to those of the ab- and ac-planes. This suggests that the electrons prefer to couple to phonon modes in which the motion of the atoms is perpendicular to the plane of transport. The electronic entropy, superfluid density, Raman response, spin susceptibility and thermoelectric power were calculated from energy-momentum dispersions determined by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). An excellent match with experimental data was obtained. This is a highly significant result because it provides the first comprehensive link between these bulk properties and the ARPES measurements which are dominated by the outermost CuO2 layer. Thus, in most respects surface effects do not appear to seriously modify or obscure the band structure which governs bulk properties. The calculations reveal the presence of a van Hove singularity (vHs) at the Fermi level (EF ) in the heavily overdoped regime to be a universal feature of the cuprates. The evolution of these properties with temperature and doping can be fully explained by the retreat of EF from the vHs and the opening of a normal state pseudogap as doping is decreased. Consequently, the pairing potential amplitude is found to be a strongly decreasing function of hole concentration, similar to the doping dependence of the exchange interaction, J. The pairing interaction is possibly a universal function of the EF â EvHs with the maximum in the transition temperature (Tc) governed by the exact magnitude of the density of states on the flanks of the vHs. These are key new discoveries which may provide a route forward to solving the puzzle of high-temperature superconductivity.</p>


Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 5830
Author(s):  
Andrzej Ślebarski ◽  
Maciej M. Maśka

We investigated the effect of enhancement of superconducting transition temperature Tc by nonmagnetic atom disorder in the series of filled skutterudite-related compounds (La3M4Sn13, Ca3Rh4Sn13, Y5Rh6Sn18, Lu5Rh6Sn18; M= Co, Ru, Rh), where the atomic disorder is generated by various defects or doping. We have shown that the disorder on the coherence length scale ξ in these nonmagnetic quasiskutterudite superconductors additionally generates a non-homogeneous, high-temperature superconducting phase with Tc⋆>Tc (dilute disorder scenario), while the strong fluctuations of stoichiometry due to increasing doping can rapidly increase the superconducting transition temperature of the sample even to the value of Tc⋆∼2Tc (dense disorder leading to strong inhomogeneity). This phenomenon seems to be characteristic of high-temperature superconductors and superconducting heavy fermions, and recently have received renewed attention. We experimentally documented the stronger lattice stiffening of the inhomogeneous superconducting phase Tc⋆ in respect to the bulk Tc one and proposed a model that explains the Tc⋆>Tc behavior in the series of nonmagnetic skutterudite-related compounds.


2002 ◽  
Vol 16 (10n11) ◽  
pp. 351-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
MASANORI SUGAHARA ◽  
NIKOLAI N. BOGOLUBOV

Recently, new types of high temperature superconductors have been found which are characterized by the existence of circular molecular orbits in each unit site of 2D s/p electron system. In view of the characteristic, a new model of superconductivity is studied based on the stability of the correlated state of electrons in the 2D interconnection of circular orbits. This model gives an estimation of the upper bound of superfluidity transition temperature: T c ~ 130-400 K for fcc C 60, and T c ~ 110-340 K for hole-doped MgB 2.


1987 ◽  
Vol 109 (8) ◽  
pp. 2528-2530 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angelica M. Stacy ◽  
John V. Badding ◽  
Margret J. Geselbracht ◽  
William K. Ham ◽  
Gary F. Holland ◽  
...  

1986 ◽  
Vol 41 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 290-293
Author(s):  
Mariusz Maćkowiak ◽  
Maria Zdanowska-Fra̧zek ◽  
Piotr Kozioł ◽  
Jan Stankowski ◽  
Alarich Weiss

The 127I NQR frequency in anilinium iodide C6H5NH3⊕I⊖ was studied at pressures up to 300 MPa and within the temperature range 77 K - 290 K. With increasing pressure the order-disorder transition point Tc is shifted to higher temperatures. The pressure coefficient of the phase transition temperature amounts to dTc/dp = 4.2 x 10-2 deg MPa-1. The pressure coefficient of the NQR frequency is negative. In addition, the 12'I nuclear quadrupole coupling constants and the respective asymmetry parameters η were evaluated as a function of pressure. The results confirm the close connection between the mechanism of the phase transition and the dynamics of the N - H⊕ ...I⊖ hydrogen bonds.


MRS Bulletin ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 17 (8) ◽  
pp. 16-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
David C. Larbalestier

As I write, it is about six years since Bednorz and Müller sent off their amazing paper reporting superconductivity at about 30 K for a mixed phase sample in the La-Ba-Cu-O system. After an incubation period of a few months, during which only a handful of people paid any attention, the community suddenly woke up (literally overnight) to the realization that the discovery was genuine, when Kitazawa (Tokyo University) and Chu (University of Houston) confirmed the result at the 1986 Fall Meeting of the Materials Research Society. No need to repeat the stories of the next frantic couple of years: the Nobel Prize for the discovery, the tantalizing prospect of another prize for understanding the superconducting mechanism, the almost limitless prospects of new superconducting technologies which appeared in article after article, designed not just for scientists and engineers, but for the general public at large. Now, six years later, perhaps some perspective on the high-temperature superconductivity discoveries is possible.At the fundamental science level, the discoveries have indeed been spectacular. Many layered structures based on the CuO2 sheets have been discovered. The first advance was the Tokyo group's discovery of the structure and composition of the superconducting phase La2-xBaxCuO4-δ, where x is optimally about 0.15. Then came the Alabama/Houston discovery of superconductivity at 92 K in YBa2Cu3O7-δ, followed rather quickly by the discoveries of 110 K superconductivity in the Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O (BSCCO) system at Tsukuba and then 125 K in the Tl-Ba-Ca-Cu-O (TBCCO) system by the Arkansas group.


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