Extended quantum criticality of low-dimensional superconductors near a spin-density-wave instability
A. Sedeki, D. Bergeron, and C. Bourbonnais

TL;DR
This study uses renormalization group techniques to explore the non-Fermi-liquid behavior and extended quantum criticality in quasi-one-dimensional superconductors near a spin-density-wave instability, revealing anomalous spectral features and scattering rates.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the normal state near quantum criticality in low-dimensional superconductors, highlighting the extended critical region and unconventional quasiparticle dynamics.
Findings
Non-Fermi-liquid temperature downturn of quasiparticle weight
Extended quantum critical region correlated with superconductivity
Unusual temperature dependence of quasiparticle scattering rate
Abstract
We use the renormalization group method to study the normal state of quasi-one-dimensional superconductors nearby a spin-density-wave instability. On the basis of one-loop scattering amplitudes for the quasi-one-dimensional electron gas, the integration of the renormalization group equations for the two-loop single particle Matsubara self-energy leads to a nonFermi-liquid temperature downturn of the momentum-resolved quasi-particle weight over most part of the Fermi surface. The amplitude of the downturn correlates with the entire instability line for superconductivity, defining an extended quantum critical region of the phase diagram as a function of nesting deviations of the Fermi surface. One also extracts the downward renormalization of interchain hopping amplitudes at arbitrary low temperature in the normal phase. By means of analytical continuation of the Matsubara self-energy,…
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