Inverse proximity effect in $s$-wave and $d$-wave superconductors coupled to topological insulators
Henning G. Hugdal, Morten Amundsen, Jacob Linder, Asle Sudb{\o}

TL;DR
This paper investigates the inverse proximity effect in superconductor-topological insulator bilayers, revealing how spin-orbit coupling induces unconventional pairing correlations and how the superconducting gap can be suppressed or enhanced depending on system parameters.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical analysis of the inverse proximity effect in s-wave and d-wave superconductor-topological insulator systems, highlighting the conditions for strong gap suppression and the role of Fermi surface matching.
Findings
Spin-orbit coupling induces triplet correlations in the superconductor.
The gap suppression is strongest when Fermi momenta of S and TI coincide.
Low Fermi energy superconductors can exhibit a tunable inverse proximity effect.
Abstract
We study the inverse proximity effect in a bilayer consisting of a thin - or -wave superconductor (S) and a topological insulator (TI). Integrating out the topological fermions of the TI, we find that spin-orbit coupling is induced in the S, which leads to spin-triplet -wave (-wave) correlations in the anomalous Green's function for an -wave (-wave) superconductor. Solving the self-consistency equation for the superconducting order parameter, we find that the inverse proximity effect can be strong for parameters for which the Fermi momenta of the S and TI coincide. The suppression of the gap is approximately proportional to , where is the dimensionless superconducting coupling constant. This is consistent with the fact that a higher gives a more robust superconducting state. For an -wave S, the interval of TI chemical potentials…
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