Abstract

Hund's coupling in multiorbital systems allows for the possibility of even-parity orbital-antisymmetric spin-triplet pairing, which can be stabilized by spin-orbit coupling (SOC). While this pairing expressed in the orbital basis is uniform and spin-triplet, it appears in the band basis as a pseudospin-singlet, with the momentum dependence determined by the SOC and the underlying triplet character remaining in the form of interband pairing active away from the Fermi energy. Here, we examine the role of momentum-dependent SOC in generating nontrivial pairing symmetries, as well as the hidden triplet nature associated with this interorbital pairing, which we dub a "shadowed triplet". Applying this concept to Sr$_{2}$RuO$_{4}$, we first derive several forms of SOC with $d$-wave form factors from a microscopic model, and subsequently we show that for a range of SOC parameters, a pairing state with $s+id_{xy}$ symmetry can be stabilized. Such a pairing state is distinct from pure spin-singlet and -triplet pairings due to its unique character of pseudospin-energy locking. We discuss experimental probes to differentiate the shadowed triplet pairing from conventional pseudospin-triplet and -singlet pairings.

Highlights

  • A key feature of superconductivity (SC) is the antisymmetric wave function of the Cooper pair under the exchange of two electrons

  • While this pairing expressed in the orbital basis is uniform and spin-triplet, it appears in the band basis as a pseudospin-singlet, with the momentum dependence determined by the spin-orbit coupling (SOC) and the underlying triplet character remaining in the form of interband pairing active away from the Fermi energy

  • By taking a simple two-orbital model, we show how a purely interorbital s-wave triplet pairing in the orbital basis becomes an intraband pseudospin-singlet pairing with nontrivial momentum dependence near the Fermi surface (FS), as well as pseudospin-singlet and -triplet interband pairings, which contain momentum dependence

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

A key feature of superconductivity (SC) is the antisymmetric wave function of the Cooper pair under the exchange of two electrons. We study a microscopic route to k-SOC and how SOC transforms even-parity interorbital spin-triplet SC into pseudospin-singlet and -triplet SC in a Hund’s metal, where the multiorbital nature and strong Hund’s coupling are crucial.

GENERAL MICROSCOPIC HAMILTONIAN
TWO-ORBITAL MODEL
MICROSCOPIC ROUTE TO
In-plane B2g
In-plane B1g
Interlayer Eg
APPLICATION TO Sr2RuO4
Findings
SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call