Tailoring of the interference-induced surface superconductivity by an applied electric field
Yunfei Bai, Libo Zhang, Xiaobing Luo, A. A. Shanenko, and Yajiang Chen

TL;DR
This paper investigates how an applied electric field influences interference-induced surface superconductivity, showing that the electric field can be used to tune the surface critical temperature through numerical solutions of the Bogoliubov-de Gennes equations.
Contribution
It introduces the effect of an electric field on interference-induced surface superconductivity, providing a way to control surface superconducting properties.
Findings
Surface critical temperature is sensitive to electric field magnitude.
Electric field can be used to tailor surface superconducting characteristics.
Interference effects significantly influence surface superconductivity.
Abstract
Nucleation of the pair condensate near surfaces above the upper critical magnetic field and the pair-condensate enhancement/suppression induced by changes in the electron-phonon interaction at interfaces are the most known examples of the surface superconductivity. Recently, another example has been reported, when the surface enhancement of the critical superconducting temperature occurs due to quantum interference. In this case the pair states spread over the entire volume of the system while exhibiting the constructive interference near the surface. In the present work we investigate how an applied electric field impacts the interference-induced surface superconductivity. The study is based on a numerical solution of the self-consistent Bogoliubov-de Gennes equations for a one-dimensional attractive Hubbard model. Our results demonstrate that the surface superconducting…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
