Intrinsic superconducting diode effects in tilted Weyl and Dirac semimetals
Kai Chen, Bishnu Karki, Pavan Hosur

TL;DR
This paper investigates the intrinsic superconducting diode effect in tilted Weyl and Dirac semimetals, revealing that multiple Fermi pockets and pairing channels are crucial for its realization, especially in systems with asymmetric band structures.
Contribution
It demonstrates that multiple Fermi pockets enable the superconducting diode effect in tilted Weyl and Dirac semimetals, highlighting key factors for its realization in topological semimetals.
Findings
Multiple Fermi pockets enhance the diode effect.
Particle-hole symmetry forbids the effect at the nodes.
Multiple pairing channels contribute to supercurrents.
Abstract
We explore Weyl and Dirac semimetals with tilted nodes as platforms for realizing an intrinsic superconducting diode effect. Although tilting breaks sufficient spatial and time-reversal symmetries, we prove that -- at least for conventional -wave singlet pairing -- the effect is forbidden by an emergent particle-hole symmetry at low energies if the Fermi level is tuned to the nodes. Then, as a stepping stone to the three-dimensional semimetals, we analyze a minimal one-dimensional model with a tilted helical node using Ginzburg-Landau theory. While one might naively expect a drastic enhancement of the effect when the node turns from type-I to type-II, we find that the presence of multiple Fermi pockets is more important as it enables multiple pairing amplitudes with indepedent contributions to supercurrents in opposite directions. Equipped with this insight, we construct minimal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Graphene research and applications
