Elaboration of the alpha-Model Derived from the BCS Theory of Superconductivity
D. C. Johnston

TL;DR
This paper refines the alpha-model based on BCS theory for superconductivity, explicitly deriving thermodynamic properties as functions of alpha, and compares these with BCS predictions, considering deviations due to mechanisms like anisotropy and strong coupling.
Contribution
It explicitly formulates BCS equations in terms of alpha for the alpha-model and provides comprehensive tables and plots for various alpha values, enhancing understanding of deviations from BCS predictions.
Findings
Explicit BCS equations in terms of alpha are derived.
Tables of thermodynamic properties for various alpha values are provided.
Deviations due to gap anisotropy and strong coupling are discussed.
Abstract
The single-band alpha-model of superconductivity [H. Padamsee, et al., J. Low Temp. Phys. {\bf 12}, 387 (1973)] is a popular model that was adapted from the single-band Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory of superconductivity mainly to allow fits to electronic heat capacity versus temperature T data that deviate from the BCS prediction. The model assumes that the normalized superconducting order parameter Delta(T)/Delta(0) and therefore the normalized London penetration depth lambda_L(T)/lambda_L(0) are the same as in BCS theory, calculated using the BCS value alpha_BCS = 1.764 of alpha = Delta(0)/(kB Tc), where kB is Boltzmann's constant and Tc is the superconducting transition temperature. On the other hand, to calculate the electronic free energy, entropy, heat capacity and thermodynamic critical field versus T, the alpha-model takes alpha to be an adjustable parameter. Here we…
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