Nodal Structure of Unconventional Superconductors Probed by the Angle Resolved Thermal Transport Measurements
Y. Matsuda, K. Izawa, and I. Vekhter

TL;DR
This paper reviews how angle-resolved thermal transport measurements reveal the nodal structures of unconventional superconductors, providing insights into their pairing mechanisms and gap symmetries.
Contribution
It summarizes the theoretical basis and experimental findings of using angular thermal transport to determine nodal structures in various unconventional superconductors.
Findings
Identified nodal directions in several superconductors.
Correlated nodal structures with pairing mechanisms.
Validated thermal transport as a key probe for gap symmetry.
Abstract
Over the past two decades, unconventional superconductivity with gap symmetry other than s-wave has been found in several classes of materials, including heavy fermion (HF), high-T_c, and organic superconductors. Unconventional superconductivity is characterized by anisotropic superconducting gap functions, which may have zeros (nodes) along certain directions in the Brillouin zone. The nodal structure is closely related to the pairing interaction, and it is widely believed that the presence of nodes is a signature of magnetic or some other exotic, rather than conventional phonon-mediated, pairing mechanism. Therefore experimental determination of the gap function is of fundamental importance. However, the detailed gap structure, especially the direction of the nodes, is an unresolved issue in most unconventional superconductors. Recently it has been demonstrated that the thermal…
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