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PHYS 342/555 Introduction to solid state physics Instructor: Dr. Pengcheng Dai Associate Professor of Physics The University of Tennessee (Room 407A, Nielsen, 974-1509) (Office hours: TR 1:10PM-2:00 PM) Lecture 21, room 304 Nielsen Chapter 12: Superconductivity Lecture in pdf format will be available at: http://www.phys.utk.edu 1 The London equation The assumption of London model: in a superconductor at T < Tc , only a fraction ns (T ) / n of the total number of conduction electrons are capable of participating in a supercurrent. ns (T ) is the density of superconducting electrons (superfluid density). The remaining fraction of electrons are "normal fluid" density n − ns that cannot carry an electric current without normal dissipation. Suppose that an electric field momentarily arises within a superconductor. The superconducting electrons will be freely accelerated without G G dvs dissipation: m = −eE. dt Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-2 Since the current density carried by these electrons is G d G ns e 2 G G j = −evs ns , we have j= E. dt m G G ns e 2 AC conductivity j (ω ) = σ (ω ) E (ω ), σ (ω ) = i . mω G G 1 ∂B Faraday's law of induction, ∇ × E = − , c ∂t G ns e 2 G ⎞ ∂⎛ B ⎟ = 0. ⎜∇× j + mc ⎠ ∂t ⎝ G 4π G Consider Maxwell equation ∇ × B = j , that determines the c magnetic fields and current densities that can exist within a perfect conductor. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-3 Note that any static field B determines a static current density j. Since any time-independent B and j are trivially solutions to the first equation, the two equations are consistent with an arbitrary static magnetic field. This is incompatible with the observed behavior of superconductors, which permit no fields in their interior. By restricting the full set of solutions to those that obey G ns e 2 G ∇× j = − B, known as the London equation. The reason for mc having the more restrictive London equation is that it leads to the Meissner effect. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-4 G 4π ns e 2 G 2 G 4π ns e 2 G ∇ B= B, ∇ j = j . These equatios predict that 2 2 mc mc currents and magnetic fields in superconductors can exist only within a layer of thickness Λ of the surface, where Λ is the London penetration depth. 2 1/ 2 3/ 2 1/ 2 ⎛ mc ⎞ ⎛ rs ⎞ ⎛ n ⎞ Λ=⎜ = 41.9 ⎜ ⎟ ⎜ ⎟ . 2 ⎟ ⎝ 4π ns e ⎠ ⎝ a0 ⎠ ⎝ ns ⎠ Thus the London equation implies the Meissner effect, along with a specific picture of the surface current that screen out the 2 applied field. These currents occur within a surface layer of thickness of 102 − 103 Å. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-5 Coherence length The coherence length is a measure of the distance within which the superconducting electron concentration cannot change drastically in a spatially-varying magnetic field. We define an intrinsic coherence length ξ 0 related to the critical modulation by ξ 0 = 1/ q0 . We have ξ 0 = = 2 k F / 2mEg . The coherence length and the actual penetration depth depend on the mean free path of the electrons measured in the normal state. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-6 Microscopic theory: qualitative features Bardeen, Cooper, Schrieffer theory of superconductivity: 1. A net attractive interaction between electrons in the neighborhood of the Fermi surface. Although the direct electrostatic interaction is repulsive, it is possible for the ionic motion to "overscreen" the Coulomb interaction, leading to a net attraction. 2. The electron-lattice-electron interaction leads to an energy gap of the observed magnitude. The indirect interaction proceeds when one electron interacts with the lattice and deforms it; a second electron sees the deformed lattice and adjusts itself to take advantage of the deformation to lower its energy. Thus the net attractive force. 3. The penetration depth and the coherence length are natural consequences of the BCS theory. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-7 4. The criterion for the Tc of an element or alloy involves the electron density of orbital D (ε F ) of one spin at the Fermi level and the electron lattice interaction U , which can be estimated from the electrical resistivity. For UD (ε F ) 1 the BCS theory predicts Tc = 1.13θ e −1/ UD (ε F ) . Where θ is the Debye temperature and U is an attractive interaction. The result for Tc is satisfied at least qualitatively by the experimental data. The higher the resistivity at room temperature the higher is U , and thus the more likely it is that a metal will be a superconductor when cooled. 5. Mangetic flux through a superconducting ring is quantized and the effective unit of charge is 2e rather than e. The BCS ground state involves pairs of electrons. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-8 BCS superconductors k BTc = 1.13=ω D ⋅ e − 1 N (0) V N (0) is the density of electronic levels for a single spin population in the normal metal and ω and V0 are the parameters of the model Hamiltonian. Because of the exponential dependence, the effective coupling V0 cannot be determined precisely enough to permit very accurate computations of the critical temperature. Higher Tc is achieved with: ωD → lighter elements Larger N(0) → van Hove singularity etc. Larger |V| → stronger electron-phonon int. Larger Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-9 Energy gap The zero temperature energy gap: Δ(0) = 2=ω D ⋅ e − 1 N (0) V The fundamental formula for the relationship between Tc and gap independent of the phenomenological parameters: Δ (0) = 1.76, k BTc The BCS theory also predicts that near the critical temperature the energy gap vanishes according to the universal law 1/ 2 ⎛ T⎞ Δ (T ) = 1.74 ⎜1 − ⎟ Δ(0) ⎝ Tc ⎠ , T ≈ Tc . Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-10 Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-11 Critical Field The elementary BCS prediction for H c (T ) is often expressed in terms of the deviation from the empirical law: 2 ⎛T ⎞ H c (T ) ≈ 1− ⎜ ⎟ . H c (0) ⎝ Tc ⎠ The quantity [ H c (T ) / H c (0)] − [1 − (T / Tc ) 2 ] is shown for several superconductors below. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-12 Specific heat At the critical temperature (in zero magnetic field) the elementary BCS theory predicts a discontinuity in the specific heat: cs − cn cn = 1.43. Tc The low-temperature electronic specific heat can also be cast in a parameter independent form, cs ⎛ Δ (0) ⎞ = 1.34 ⎜ ⎟ γ Tc ⎝ T ⎠ 3/ 2 e −Δ (0) / T , where γ is the coefficient of the linear term in the specific heat of the metal in the normal state. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-13 (a ) Take the time derivative of the London equation (10) to show G G G G 2 2 that ∂j / ∂t = (c / 4πλL ) E. (b) if mdv / dt = qE , as for free carriers of charge q and mass m, show that λL2 = mc 2 / 4π nq 2 . Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-14 High-temperature superconductors Parent Cuprate La2CuO4 2D Heisenberg Antiferromagnet with s = 1/2 on a square lattice T (K) 300 Néel order is quickly suppressed upon hole doping. 200 Hole Doping: → (Cu2+ → Cu2+δ ) La3+ 3D Néel order 100 spin-glass Sr2+ 0 0 0.02 0.05 Hole doping Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-15 High-Tc Superconductivity Superconductivity shows up when moderately doped. Layered structure → Essentially 2D transport Basic building block: CuO2 plane Cu M. Kastner et al., RMP 70, 897 (1998). Oxygen Only one band is relevant to the transport in the CuO2 plane. (Cu 3d – O 2p mixture) Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-16 Electrons form Cooper pairs Conventional low temperature SC z The binding of electrons into Cooper pairs is essential. S= z z =0 Long-range phase coherence among the pairs is also required to have superconductivity. Electron pairing is mediated by electronphonon interaction. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-17 Single layer families of high-Tc cuprates Nd2-xCexCuO4 (Tc~25K) La2-xSrxCuO4 (Tc~40K) Pr1-xLaCexCuO4 (Tc~25K) La2CuO4+y (Tc~40K) Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-18 Real, reciprocal space of CuO2 plane La2-xSrxCuO4 single layer, orthorhombic Nd2-xCexCuO4 single layer, tetragonal Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-19 How SC is established from a long range AF ordered insulator? Diagonal SDW coexists with 3D AF order in lightly doped region and survive in the insulating phase with doping. At the transition to SC, SDW changes its direction and coexists w/ SC. SDW has 2D characteristic. Kang et al. (2005) PRB Wakimoto et al. Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-20 SC Tc is intimated related to the incommensurability of the SDW order Dai/PHYS 342/555 Spring 2006 Chapter 12-21