Superconducting diode effect in fractal superconductors: fractional-order Ginzburg-Landau theory for Josephson junctions
Yuriy Yerin, Iman Askerzade

TL;DR
This paper introduces a fractional-order Ginzburg-Landau framework to explain and enhance the superconducting diode effect in fractal superconductors, enabling tunable nonreciprocity without magnetic fields.
Contribution
It develops a novel fractional kinetic theory for Josephson junctions with fractal media, revealing how to achieve near-ideal superconducting diodes through fractional order tuning.
Findings
Analytic solutions show rectification scales with fractal dimensionality.
Derived a gauge-invariant free energy and current-phase relation.
Confirmed robust, tunable nonreciprocity with near-ideal diode response.
Abstract
We develop a fractional-order Ginzburg-Landau (GL) framework for nonreciprocal superconducting transport in Josephson junctions formed by fractal superconductors or superconducting media with nonlocal correlations, separated by a noncentrosymmetric normal layer. We show that nonreciprocity and the superconducting diode effect arise from the interplay between the Lifshitz invariant and fractional kinetics, with the latter serving as an effective, symmetry-consistent representation of fractal geometry and finite-range memory. Two complementary approaches are pursued. In a fractional integral GL formulation, spatial integration on a fractal space yields analytic solutions and reveals how rectification scales with the dimensionality of the fractal media and the strength of the Lifshitz-like drift. In a fractional derivative-based formulation derived via the Agrawal variational principle…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNonlinear Photonic Systems · Quantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics · Fractional Differential Equations Solutions
