Superconductivity in three-dimensional spin-orbit coupled semimetals
Lucile Savary, Jonathan Ruhman, J\"orn W. F. Venderbos, Liang Fu,, Patrick A. Lee

TL;DR
This paper investigates the unique superconducting pairing mechanisms in three-dimensional spin-orbit coupled semimetals with j=3/2 quasiparticles, revealing how their fundamental differences from ordinary metals influence pairing symmetry and stability.
Contribution
It develops a new approach to analyze pairing instabilities in j=3/2 materials and applies it to YPtBi, highlighting the impact of spin-orbit coupling and carrier type on superconductivity.
Findings
Pairing strength encodes the j=3/2 nature of the Fermi surface.
Superconductivity depends on whether the material is electron or hole doped.
In hole-doped YPtBi, two competing odd-parity channels may break time-reversal symmetry.
Abstract
Motivated by the experimental detection of superconductivity in the low-carrier density half-Heusler compound YPtBi, we study the pairing instabilities of three-dimensional strongly spin-orbit coupled semimetals with a quadratic band touching point. In these semimetals the electronic structure at the Fermi energy is described by spin j=3/2 quasiparticles, which are fundamentally different from those in ordinary metals with spin j=1/2. We develop a general approach to analyzing pairing instabilities in j=3/2 materials by decomposing the pair scattering interaction into irreducible channels, projecting them to the Fermi surface and deriving the corresponding Eliashberg theory. Applying our method to a generic density-density interaction in YPtBi we establish the following results: (i) The pairing strength in each channel uniquely encodes the j=3/2 nature of the Fermi surface band…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeusler alloys: electronic and magnetic properties · Topological Materials and Phenomena · 2D Materials and Applications
