Publication: Theory of the Pairbreaking Superconductor-Metal Transition in Nanowires
Open/View Files
Date
2009
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Del Maestro, Adrian, Bernd Rosenow, and Subir Sachdev. 2009. Theory of the pairbreaking superconductor-metal transition in nanowires. Annals of Physics 324(3): 523-582.
Research Data
Abstract
We present a detailed description of a zero temperature phase transition between superconducting and diffusive metallic states in very thin wires due to a Cooper pair breaking mechanism. The dissipative critical theory contains current reducing fluctuations in the guise of both quantum and thermally activated phase slips. A full cross-over phase diagram is computed via an expansion in the inverse number of complex components of the superconducting order parameter (one in the physical case). The fluctuation corrections to the direct current electrical (\(\sigma\)) and thermal (\(\kappa\)) conductivities are determined, and we find that the electrical conductivity (\(\sigma\)) has a non-monotonic temperature dependence in the metallic phase which may be consistent with recent experimental results on ultra-narrow wires. In the quantum critical regime, the ratio of the thermal to electrical conductivity displays a linear temperature dependence and thus the Wiedemann-Franz law is obeyed, with a new universal experimentally verifiable Lorenz number.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
superconductivity, pairbreaking, quantum phase transition, nanowire, Wiedemann–Franz law, thermoelectric transport, superconductor–metal transition, low-dimensional transport
Terms of Use
This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Open Access Policy Articles (OAP), as set forth at Terms of Service