Electronic Collective Modes and Superconductivity in Layered Conductors
A.Bill, H.Morawitz, and V.Z.Kresin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how low-energy electronic collective modes, especially plasmons, influence superconductivity in layered conductors, deriving equations for the order parameter and analyzing their impact on critical temperature.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model incorporating full dielectric function dependence to evaluate plasmon effects on superconductivity in layered materials.
Findings
Low-energy plasmons can enhance superconductivity.
The plasmon contribution dominates in metal-intercalated halide nitrides.
Layered superconductors cannot be accurately described by purely 2D models.
Abstract
A distinctive feature of layered conductors is the presence of low-energy electronic collective modes of the conduction electrons. This affects the dynamic screening properties of the Coulomb interaction in a layered material. We study the consequences of the existence of these collective modes for superconductivity. General equations for the superconducting order parameter are derived within the strong-coupling phonon-plasmon scheme that account for the screened Coulomb interaction. Specifically, we calculate the superconducting critical temperature Tc taking into account the full temperature, frequency and wave-vector dependence of the dielectric function. We show that low-energy plasmons may contribute constructively to superconductivity. Three classes of layered superconductors are discussed within our model: metal-intercalated halide nitrides, layered organic materials and high-Tc…
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