The Dependence of the Superconducting Transition Temperature of Organic Molecular Crystals on Intrinsically Non-Magnetic Disorder: a Signature of either Unconventional Superconductivity or Novel Local Magnetic Moment Formation
B. J. Powell, Ross H. McKenzie

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how impurities affect the superconducting transition temperature in organic crystals, suggesting non-magnetic disorder points to unconventional pairing or local magnetic moments, with implications for understanding their superconducting nature.
Contribution
The study provides a theoretical framework confirming the Abrikosov-Gorkov formula fits experimental data and argues against s-wave pairing, proposing d-wave or local moment formation as key features.
Findings
T_c suppression follows Abrikosov-Gorkov behavior
Non-magnetic disorder implies non-s-wave pairing
Possible formation of local magnetic moments
Abstract
We give a theoretical analysis of published experimental studies of the effects of impurities and disorder on the superconducting transition temperature, T_c, of the organic molecular crystals kappa-ET_2X and beta-ET_2X (where ET is bis(ethylenedithio)tetrathiafulvalene and X is an anion eg I_3). The Abrikosov-Gorkov (AG) formula describes the suppression of T_c both by magnetic impurities in singlet superconductors, including s-wave superconductors and by non-magnetic impurities in a non-s-wave superconductor. We show that various sources of disorder lead to the suppression of T_c as described by the AG formula. This is confirmed by the excellent fit to the data, the fact that these materials are in the clean limit and the excellent agreement between the value of the interlayer hopping integral, t_perp, calculated from this fit and the value of t_perp found from angular-dependant…
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