Theory of quantum metal to superconductor transitions in highly conducting systems
B. Spivak, P. Oreto, S. A. Kivelson

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for quantum superconductor-metal transitions in disordered systems, highlighting inhomogeneity, conductivity divergence, and multiple transition sequences in exotic superconductors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theory for quantum phase transitions in disordered superconductors, especially in cases where Anderson's theorem does not hold, and predicts multiple sequential transitions.
Findings
Inhomogeneous order parameter distribution near transition
Divergence of conductivity as transition approaches
Prediction of sequential d-wave to s-wave and s-wave to metal transitions
Abstract
We derive the theory of the quantum (zero temperature) superconductor to metal transition in disordered materials when the resistance of the normal metal near criticality is small compared to the quantum of resistivity. This can occur most readily in situations in which ``Anderson's theorem'' does not apply. We explicitly study the transition in superconductor-metal composites, in an s-wave superconducting film in the presence of a magnetic field, and in a low temperature disordered d-wave superconductor. Near the point of the transition, the distribution of the superconducting order parameter is highly inhomogeneous. To describe this situation we employ a procedure which is similar to that introduced by Mott for description of the temperature dependence of the variable range hopping conduction. As the system approaches the point of the transition from the metal to the superconductor,…
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