Electron pairing in the presence of incipient bands in iron-based superconductors
Xiao Chen, S. Maiti, A. Linscheid, and P. J. Hirschfeld

TL;DR
This paper investigates how incipient bands influence superconductivity in iron-based materials, showing that under certain conditions they can significantly enhance pairing and critical temperatures, challenging previous negative conclusions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that incipient bands can support strong-coupling superconductivity without a critical interaction threshold, especially when pairing is induced by Fermi-surface interactions.
Findings
Incipient bands can host large superconducting gaps without requiring critical interaction strength.
Models with induced pairing on incipient bands explain non-exponential Tc suppression.
Interplay of phonon and spin fluctuations can bootstrap superconductivity in these systems.
Abstract
Recent experiments on certain Fe-based superconductors have hinted at a role for paired electrons in "incipient" bands that are close to, but do not cross the Fermi level. Related theoretical works disagree on whether or not strong-coupling superconductivity is required to explain such effects, and whether a critical interaction strength exists. In this work, we consider various versions of the model problem of pairing of electrons in the presence of an incipient band, within a simple multiband weak-coupling BCS approximation. We categorize the problem into two cases: case(I) where superconductivity arises from the "incipient band pairing" alone, and case(II) where it is induced on an incipient band by pairing due to Fermi-surface based interactions. Negative conclusions regarding the importance of incipient bands have been drawn so far largely based on case(I), but we show explicitly…
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