s-wave Superconductivity Phase Diagram in the Inhomogeneous Two-Dimensional Attractive Hubbard Model
K. Aryanpour, T. Paiva, W. E. Pickett, R. T. Scalettar

TL;DR
This study investigates how inhomogeneous patterns of attractive interactions in a 2D Hubbard model can enhance superconductivity and critical temperature, revealing that inhomogeneity can be beneficial under certain conditions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that inhomogeneous distributions of attractive interactions can increase the superconducting order parameter and critical temperature, regardless of pattern type, in the 2D Hubbard model.
Findings
Inhomogeneity can lead to higher zero-temperature pairing amplitude.
Inhomogeneity can increase the superconducting critical temperature T_c.
Pattern of inhomogeneity (stripes, checkerboard, random) is largely unimportant.
Abstract
We study s-wave superconductivity in the two-dimensional square lattice attractive Hubbard Hamiltonian for various inhomogeneous patterns of interacting sites. Using the Bogoliubov-de Gennes (BdG) mean field approximation, we obtain the phase diagram for inhomogeneous patterns in which the on-site attractive interaction U_i between the electrons takes on two values, U_i=0 and -U/(1-f) (with f the concentration of non-interacting sites) as a function of average electron occupation per site n, and study the evolution of the phase diagram as f varies. In certain regions of the phase diagram, inhomogeneity results in a larger zero temperature average pairing amplitude (order parameter) and also a higher superconducting (SC) critical temperature T_c, relative to a uniform system with the same mean interaction strength (U_i=-U on all sites). These effects are observed for stripes,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
