Intrinsic Optical Dichroism in the 2d Model of Chiral Superconducting State

Similar documents
Superconductivity and Electron Correlations in Ruthenates

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.supr-con] 16 Dec 2018

"First USC Theory-Experiment Collaborative Meeting" Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

Topological Kondo Insulators!

Effective theory of quadratic degeneracies

Real Space Bogoliubov de Gennes Equations Study of the Boson Fermion Model

Supporting Information

Zero-bias conductance peak in detached flakes of superconducting 2H-TaS2 probed by STS

Supplementary figures

A Twisted Ladder: Relating the Iron Superconductors and the High-Tc Cuprates

Effect of Lishitz transition on thermal transport properties in Sr 2 RuO 4

Ehrenfest Relations for Ultrasound Absorption in Sr 2 RuO 4

Supplementary Figures.

Lecture notes on topological insulators

ARPES studies of cuprates. Inna Vishik Physics 250 (Special topics: spectroscopies of quantum materials) UC Davis, Fall 2016

Microscopic Properties of BCS Superconductors (cont.)

Interstitial Mn in (Ga,Mn)As: Hybridization with Conduction Band and Electron Mediated Exchange Coupling

Various Facets of Chalker- Coddington network model

Enhancing Superconductivity by Disorder

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

NiS - An unusual self-doped, nearly compensated antiferromagnetic metal [Supplemental Material]

Theory of d-vector of in Spin- Triplet Superconductor Sr 2 RuO 4

Role of the Octahedra Rotation on the Electronic Structures of 4d Transition Metal Oxides

Theoretical Concepts of Spin-Orbit Splitting

Strong Correlation Effects in Fullerene Molecules and Solids

Probing the Electronic Structure of Complex Systems by State-of-the-Art ARPES Andrea Damascelli

Cooperative Phenomena

5 Topological insulator with time-reversal symmetry

Space group symmetry, spin-orbit coupling and the low energy effective Hamiltonian for iron based superconductors

Unconventional superconductivity and magnetism in Sr 2 RuO 4 and related materials

Visualization of atomic-scale phenomena in superconductors

Topological Defects inside a Topological Band Insulator

Supplementary Materials for

ORBITAL SELECTIVITY AND HUND S PHYSICS IN IRON-BASED SC. Laura Fanfarillo

Supplementary Figure 1. Spin-spin relaxation curves for three La 1.8-x Eu 0.2 Sr x CuO 4 samples.

Magnets, 1D quantum system, and quantum Phase transitions

Alignment of chiral order parameter domains in Sr 2 RuO 4 by magnetic field cooling

SECOND PUBLIC EXAMINATION. Honour School of Physics Part C: 4 Year Course. Honour School of Physics and Philosophy Part C C3: CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS

Lecture 4: Basic elements of band theory

Harald Ibach Hans Lüth SOLID-STATE PHYSICS. An Introduction to Theory and Experiment

Symmetry and Group Theory

Entanglement in Many-Body Fermion Systems

Topological Kondo Insulator SmB 6. Tetsuya Takimoto

Nonlinear Electrodynamics and Optics of Graphene

More a progress report than a talk

Superfluid 3 He. Miguel A. Morales

ORBITAL SELECTIVITY AND HUND S PHYSICS IN IRON-BASED SC. Laura Fanfarillo

Optical Lattices. Chapter Polarization

A numerical calculation of the electronic specific heat for the compound Sr 2 RuO 4 below its superconducting transition temperature

Quantum phase transitions in Mott insulators and d-wave superconductors

Unusual ordered phases of magnetized frustrated antiferromagnets

Group. Benzene D 6h z B B. E ( x y, xy) ( x, y) A B B C 2

THE INTRIGUING SUPERCONDUCTIVITY OF STRONTIUM RUTHENATE

Exotic Properties of Superconductor- Ferromagnet Structures.

File name: Supplementary Information Description: Supplementary Notes, Supplementary Figures and Supplementary References

3.024 Electrical, Optical, and Magnetic Properties of Materials Spring 2012 Recitation 8 Notes

Multipole Superconductivity and Unusual Gap Closing

Electronic heat transport for a multiband superconducting gap in Sr 2 RuO 4

1 Introduction. 2 The hadronic many body problem

SECOND PUBLIC EXAMINATION. Honour School of Physics Part C: 4 Year Course. Honour School of Physics and Philosophy Part C C3: CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS

5.80 Small-Molecule Spectroscopy and Dynamics

Quantum liquid crystals in strongly correlated materials and ultracold gases

Scanning tunneling microscopy of monoatomic gold chains on vicinal Si(335) surface: experimental and theoretical study

Electronic Squeezing by Optically Pumped Phonons: Transient Superconductivity in K 3 C 60. With: Eli Wilner Dante Kennes Andrew Millis

Vortex Imaging in Unconventional Superconductors

Small and large Fermi surfaces in metals with local moments

Electrons in a periodic potential

Graphene and Planar Dirac Equation

Effect of next-nearest-neighbour interaction on d x 2 y2-wave superconducting phase in 2D t-j model

Quantum Condensed Matter Physics

3.14. The model of Haldane on a honeycomb lattice

in-medium pair wave functions the Cooper pair wave function the superconducting order parameter anomalous averages of the field operators

Topological Electromagnetic and Thermal Responses of Time-Reversal Invariant Superconductors and Chiral-Symmetric band insulators

Spatial variation of d-density-wave order in the presence of impurities

Splitting of a Cooper pair by a pair of Majorana bound states

Pseudo-Hermiticity and Generalized P T- and CP T-Symmetries

Spin or Orbital-based Physics in the Fe-based Superconductors? W. Lv, W. Lee, F. Kruger, Z. Leong, J. Tranquada. Thanks to: DOE (EFRC)+BNL

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.supr-con] 7 May 2011 Edge states of Sr 2 RuO 4 detected by in-plane tunneling spectroscopy

Little Orthogonality Theorem (LOT)

Excitonic Condensation in Systems of Strongly Correlated Electrons. Jan Kuneš and Pavel Augustinský DFG FOR1346

H ψ = E ψ. Introduction to Exact Diagonalization. Andreas Läuchli, New states of quantum matter MPI für Physik komplexer Systeme - Dresden

The Mermin-Wagner Theorem

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.mes-hall] 1 Nov 2011

Topological Physics in Band Insulators II

Spins and spin-orbit coupling in semiconductors, metals, and nanostructures

Absence of orbital-dependent Mott transition in Ca 2 x Sr x RuO 4

Physics 221A Fall 1996 Notes 16 Bloch s Theorem and Band Structure in One Dimension

Knight Shift Measurements on Superconducting Sr 2 RuO 4

Theoretical study of superconductivity in MgB 2 and its alloys

Dirac Point Degenerate with Massive Bands at a Topological Quantum Critical Point

Critical Spin-liquid Phases in Spin-1/2 Triangular Antiferromagnets. In collaboration with: Olexei Motrunich & Jason Alicea

Chapter 7. Summary and Outlook

Ψ t = ih Ψ t t. Time Dependent Wave Equation Quantum Mechanical Description. Hamiltonian Static/Time-dependent. Time-dependent Energy operator

Spin-wave dispersion in half-doped La3/2Sr1/2NiO4

Physics Letters A 374 (2010) Contents lists available at ScienceDirect. Physics Letters A.

Topological Insulator Surface States and Electrical Transport. Alexander Pearce Intro to Topological Insulators: Week 11 February 2, / 21

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.supr-con] 17 Dec 2009

Different approaches to calculate the K ± π ± π 0 e + e decay width

Spontaneous currents in ferromagnet-superconductor heterostructures

Odd-Frequency Pairing in Superconducting Heterostructures

Transcription:

J Supercond Nov Magn (2013) 26:1909 1913 DOI 10.1007/s10948-012-2046-7 ORIGINAL PAPER Intrinsic Optical Dichroism in the 2d Model of Chiral Superconducting State Karol I. Wysokiński James F. Annett Balazs L. Györffy Received: 7 November 2012 / Accepted: 3 December 2012 / Published online: 5 January 2013 The Author(s) 2013. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Recently, we have found a new intrinsic mechanism of dichroism in chiral superconductors. It relies on the existence of many orbital character of the superconducting state as in Sr 2 RuO 4. Using three orbital but a twodimensional model relevant for superconducting strontium ruthenate, we calculate temperature T and frequency ω dependent ac Hall conductivity σ xy (ω, T ) for a number of parameters. In particular, we study the changes of σ xy due to changes in the light frequency ω, spin orbit coupling λ and effective interaction parameters U ij between electrons occupying in-plane d 2g orbitals. Our calculations qualitatively agree with the measured Kerr rotation angle in Sr 2 RuO 4 and have a potential to describe other superconductors. Keywords Kerr effect Optical dichroism Chiral superconductor 1 Introduction The understanding of the many puzzling properties of Sr 2 RuO 4 superconductor has been a challenge for a long time [1]. In the normal state, this material seems to fulfill the criteria of a weakly correlated Fermi liquid [2 4]. Its superconducting state is fragile to the smallest number of impurities. Many of the thermodynamic properties including specific heat show power law temperature dependence requiring nodes in the order parameter. Other measurements indicate realization of the broken time reversed state [5]. In the bct crystal structure, reconciling consistently all of these properties requires a many band description of the system. The gaped but chiral order parameter of k x ± ik y variety exists on some of the bands and the order parameter with line nodes (k x ± ik y ) cos(k z c/2) on the other bands. Many of these puzzling properties of the system have been accounted for by a three-dimensional, three-band model [6, 7]. Recently, we have shown that the existence of interorbital [8] components of the order parameter leads to natural explanation of the polar Kerr effect [9, 10] in strontium ruthenate and possibly other superconductors [11]. In this work, we analyze the dependence of the dichroic signal resulted from interorbital or interband coupling using simple three band model of 2d RuO plane. Such a model with hidden quasi-one-dimensional superconductivity has been recently introduced [12] and argued to lead to spin triplet ground state. Here, we adopt our previous tight binding energy spectrum and in accordance with [12] assume that the dominant interactions are between electrons occupying ruthenium d xz and d yz orbitals in the spin triplet channel. The weak interactions between carriers on d xy orbitals lead to exponentially small gaps on the γ band. On the other hand, the interactions between carriers occupying d xz and d yz orbitals lead to both intraorbital and interorbital order parameters responsible for the Kerr effect. K.I. Wysokiński ( ) Institute of Physics, M. Curie-Skłodowska University, Radziszewskiego 10, 20-031 Lublin, Poland e-mail: karol@tytan.umcs.lublin.pl J.F. Annett B.L. Györffy H. H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Tyndall Ave, Bristol BS8-1TL, UK 2 Model and Approach The Fermi surface of strontium ruthenate is known to appreciable details [13]. We shall use here our previous tight binding parameterization limited to the RuO plane. We neglect very weak hoppings leading to small corrugations of

1910 J Supercond Nov Magn (2013) 26:1909 1913 Fig. 1 The two-dimensional Fermi surface centered at the Γ point of the tetragonal Brillouin zone calculated for a band structure with t ax = 1.34 and t ay = 0 and for our standard band structure for Sr 2 RuO 4 with t ax = 1.34, t ay = 0.06t ax (left panel). The same Fermi surface shown with the X point of the Brillouin zone at the center (right panel). In both cases, the hybridization parameter t ab 0.1. Note that the alpha Fermi surface sheet has only two-fold symmetry, because of the shape of the Brillouin zone boundary the Fermi surface cylinders along the c crystallographic direction. However, we shall use all three partially occupied orbitals of Ru ions. The normal state spectrum in the γ band derived from d xy orbitals (called c orbitals in the following) reads ε cc (k) = ε 0c 2t(cos k x + cos k y ) 4t cos k x cos k y, (1) while the α and β bands are derived from hybridize d xz and d yz orbitals. By symmetry, these orbitals do not hybridized with d xy. Thus, the full normal state Hamiltonian in the orbital representation and neglecting spin orbit coupling reads ε aa (k) ε ab (k) 0 Hˆ 0 (k) = ε ab (k) ε bb (k) 0, (2) 0 0 ε cc (k) where, in units in which the in-plane lattice constant a = 1, ε aa (k) = ε ab 2(t ax cos k x + t ay cos k y ), ε bb (k) = ε ab 2(t bx cos k x + t by cos k y ) and ε ab (k) = 4t ab sin k x sin k y. For the actual calculations, we use t as our energy unit. The other parameters fitted to the known experimental Fermi surface read: t = 0.45t, t ax = t by = 1.34t, t ay = t bx = 0.06t ax, t ab = 0.08t ax and ε 0c = 1.615t, ε ab = 1.062t ax. Our methodology is to solve the Bogoliubov de Gennes equations ( H ˆ0 (k) Δ(k) ˆ Δ(k) ˆ Hˆ 0 (k) ) (un ) ( ) (k) un (k) = E v N (k) N v N (k) self-consistently for eigenvectors (u N (k), v N (k)) T and eigenenergies E N at each k point of the two-dimensional Brillouin zone. The order parameter matrix is in general 6 6 matrix in the spin and orbital space. This is also true for Hˆ 0 (k) in Eq. (2) if spin indices are taken into account. This extension is necessary if spin orbit coupling is taken into account [6]. To obtain Hall conductivity, we use Fermi golden (3) rule to calculate the polarization dependent absorption of electromagnetic radiation [14, 15], which is directly related to Im σ xy (ω, T ) [16]. In the following calculations, we shall only consider the superconducting states with chiral symmetry as only these states are expected to lead to nonzero dichroic signal observed in strontium ruthenate. For the spin triplet superconductor, the orbital character of the order parameter is odd and we expect p-wave component to dominate. The order parameters have the following form Δ ij (k,t)= Δ x ij (T ) sin(k xa) + Δ y ij (T ) sin(k ya). (4) The complex coefficients Δ x ij (T ) and Δy ij (T ) depend on temperature. a is the in-plane lattice constant. 3 Results Let start the discussion of the results with presenting silent features of the underlying electron spectrum which Fermi surface consists of three sheets. They are shown in Fig. 1 in two different representations. The Fermi surfaces were calculated assuming t ay = 0 (left panel plusses) and for t ay = 0.06t ax (left panel crosses). On the scale of the figure only small differences can be seen. Obviously, the spectrum of those bands calculated for t ay = 0 shows more one-dimensional character. On the right panel, the same Fermi surface sheets are shown in the expanded Brillouin zone with X point at the center and Γ point in its corner to highlight the differences between α and β bands. In Fig. 2, the temperature dependence of the various parameters Δ ν ij (T ) and the Hall conductivity Im σ xy(ω 0,T) are shown. The interaction parameters are assumed to be:

J Supercond Nov Magn (2013) 26:1909 1913 1911 Fig. 2 The temperature dependence of the components of the order parameters Δ ν ij (T ) as defined in Eq. (4)(left panel) calculated with the interaction parameters U aa = U bb = 0.6t, U cc = 0.1t, U ab = 0 and no spin orbit coupling. The right panel shows normalized Hall conductivity for the same model and for two different frequencies ω 0.Note the very small Hebel Slichter like peak for the lower light frequency Fig. 3 The temperature dependence of the components of the order parameters Δ ν ij (T ) as defined in Eq. (4) (left panel) calculated for the interaction parameters U ij = 0.6t for i, j = a,b, andu cc = 0.1t, ω 0 = 0.03t and spin orbit coupling λ = 0.0t. Right panel shows Im σ xy (ω 0,T) in units of e 2 / for indicated values of λ and ω 0 with other parameters unchanged. Note the factor of 10 multiplying the curve obtained for λ = 0 U aa = U bb = 0.6t, U cc = 0.1t, and U ij = 0.0 fori, j = a,b,c. The only nonzero order parameters are those shown. Other order parameters are either exactly equal to those shown by symmetry or vanish. It is interesting to note the general symmetries between the Δ x ij and Δy ij values in our model. They read Δ x aa =±iδy bb and Δx ab =±iδy ab.the symmetry with respect to exchange of k x and k y is also obvious in the Hamiltonian. The symmetries become more complicated if spin orbit interaction is taken into account. The diagonal order parameters in Fig. 2 have different phases φ aa φ bb with the difference φ aa φ bb = π. Thesame figure (right panel) shows the temperature dependences of the Hall conductivities normalized to their low T values calculated for two different frequencies of scattered light ω 0 = 0.003t and ω 0 = 0.0001t. Close to T c,imσ xy (T, ω) calculated for lower frequency is strongly increased. We attribute this increase to coherence factors. It is typically observed for microwave frequencies of the order of the superconducting gaps or smaller. This increase is similar to the well-known Hebel Slichter peak [17] and we shall use this name in the following. The zero temperature values of Fig. 4 The temperature dependence of the Hall conductivities normalized to their low T values and calculated for the same set of parameters as in Fig. 3 the ω 0 Im σ xy shown in the figure read 2.1557 10 4 e 2 / for ω 0 = 0.003t and 5.1712 10 6 e 2 / for ω 0 = 0.0001t. The peaks in the temperature dependence of Im σ xy (ω 0,T) are again shown in Fig. 4 for other set of parameters. In Fig. 3 (left panel), we show the x components of the order parameters calculated for the couplings U ij = 0.6t for

1912 J Supercond Nov Magn (2013) 26:1909 1913 i, j = a,b, and U cc = 0.1t, and λ = 0. For these couplings the order parameter Δ cc is exponentially small. Realistic value of the spin orbit coupling λ = 0.1t induces the cc component of the order parameter. For nonzero λ both order parameters and T c (not shown) increase. The corresponding T dependences of the Hall conductivities calculated with λ = 0, ω 0 = 0.0003t and λ = 0.1t, ω 0 = 0.0003t and ω 0 = 0.00003t are shown in the right panel of the figure. The most important influence of spin orbit interaction on the superconductor at hand is the coupling of all three bands. Due to λ the superconducting order parameter is induced in the γ band and persists up to the common transition temperature T c. Spin orbit interaction also changes the symmetries between off-diagonal components of Δ ν, ij (not shown). To understand such behavior one has to note that λ enters various matrix elements of the Hamiltonian with different signs, e.g., ε ab (k) is supplemented by the term iλ, while ε ba (k) by +iλ.totheac and bc components of the full spin dependent Hamiltonian matrix the terms ±λ are added. All this changes the effective Fermi level and the partial densities of states in all bands, and thus differently influences various components of the order parameters. In the many orbital approaches, there are various contributions to the Hall conductivity. At zero temperature and for two orbital model Im σ xy (ω) is proportional 1 to the sum over wave vectors (suppressed in the formula below) of the expression containing inter alia the following terms [(v bb v aa ) v ab ] z [ε ab Im(Δ aa Δ bb) + ε aa Im(Δ bb Δ ab) ε bb Im(Δ aa Δ ab)]. (5) For a nonzero Hall conductivity, it is enough to have two order parameters with nonvanishing imaginary part of their product. It may be two diagonal or one diagonal and one offdiagonal in orbital space. The asymmetry between elements v bb and v aa of velocities and nonvanishing v ab is in this approach a necessary condition for nonzero dichroic signal. In the model at hand, we have checked that for U aa = 0the phase of Δ bb and Δ ab is the same and the Hall conductivity vanishes. For some parameter sets, the Hall conductivity takes on large values. Its magnitude is obviously related to the frequency of light, inter-orbital couplings and other parameters. There seem to be no general rule for prediction if Hall conductivity will be large or small. The nonmonotonic dependence on temperature of Im σ xy (ω, T ) of more complicated character than the single peak is also observed (see Fig. 3). Typically, the peak appears in the dichroic spectrum for microwave frequencies comparable or smaller than the 1 Similar ideas of interband contribution to the Kerr effect as in [8]have been developed by Taylor and Kallin [9] gap function. This is in accordance with our previous 3d results and shows that to some extent the 2d model captures the physics of the real system. Of course, to have order parameters of symmetry compatible (in the group theoretical sense) with the underlying crystal structure with horizontal nodes one needs three dimensional spectrum. In a general, three orbital case and at nonzero temperature each of the terms similar to those shown in Eq. (5) is additionally multiplied by the T dependent combination of Fermi functions and depends on T through the temperature dependence of the order parameters Δ ij (T ). The resulting expression depends on the frequency ω stemming from the conservation of energy and the eigenvalues of Bogoliubov de Gennes equation. Being a sum of many terms, each of which depends on k it may also change sign as a function of frequency. This aspect makes it difficult to assign a particular orbital as the cause of dichroism and will be discussed elsewhere. As stated earlier [8], the Hall conductivity changes sign with chirality (i.e., the sign in front of i in k x ± ik y )ofthe state. The mere existence of the spin orbit coupling is not enough to have nonzero Hall conductivity. However, both spin orbit coupling and the magnetic field B breaking time reversal symmetry will induce Kerr signal even in one band model in analogy to magnetooptic effects [18]. The signal depends on the magnitude of the field. In summary, we have studied in some details the novel mechanism of dichroism operating in multiorbital superconductors breaking time reversal symmetry. The main features agree with previous numerically more involved 3d calculations. In particular, the role of spin orbit interaction has been elucidated and found to lead to qualitative and quantitative changes of the temperature dependence of the Hall conductivity. We also established the existence of the Hebel Slichter like coherence peak in a 2d model. Acknowledgements This work has been partially supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education grant No. N N202 2631 38. Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited. References 1. Mackenzie, A.P., Maeno, Y.: Rev. Mod. Phys. 75, 657 (2003) 2. Pchelkina, Z.V., Nekrasov, I.A., Pruschke, Th., Sekiyama, A., Suga, S., Anisimov, V.I., Vollhardt, D.: Phys. Rev. B 75, 035122 (2007) 3. Singh, D.J.: Phys. Rev. B 77, 046101 (2008) 4. Pchelkina, Z.V., Nekrasov, I.A., Pruschke, Th., Suga, S., Anisimov, V.I., Vollhardt, D.: Phys. Rev. B 77, 046102 (2008) 5. Luke, G.M., Fudamoto, Y., Kojima, K.M., et al.: Nature 394, 558 (1998)

J Supercond Nov Magn (2013) 26:1909 1913 1913 6. Annett, J.F., Litak, G., Gyorffy, B.L., Wysokinski, K.I.: Phys. Rev. B 66, 134514 (2002) 7. Annett, J.F., Gyorffy, B.L., Litak, G., Wysokinski, K.I.: Eur. Phys. J. B 36, 301 (2003) 8. Wysokinski, K.I., Annett, J.F., Györffy, B.L.: Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 077004 (2012) 9. Taylor, E., Kallin, C.: Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 157001 (2012) 10. Xia, J., Maeno, Y., Beyersdorf, P.T., et al.: Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 167002 (2006) 11. Kapitulnik, A., Xia, J., Schemm, E., et al.: New J. Phys. 11, 055060 (2009) 12. Raghu, S., Kapitulnik, A., Kivelson, S.A.: Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 136401 (2010) 13. Bergemann, C., Julian, S.R., Mackenzie, A.P., NishiZaki, S., Maeno, Y.: Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 2662 (2000) 14. Capelle, K., Gross, E.K.U., Gyorffy, B.L.: Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 3753 (1997) 15. Capelle, K., Gross, E.K.U., Gyorffy, B.L.: Phys. Rev. B 58, 473 (1998) 16. Bennett, H.S., Stern, E.A.: Phys. Rev. 137, A448 (1965) 17. Hebel, L.C., Slichter, C.P.: Phys. Rev. 107, 901 (1957) 18. Ebert, H.: Rep. Prog. Phys. 59, 1665 (1996)