Theory of Giant Magnetoresistance Peak in InO Superconducting Films

ORAL

Abstract

It has been suggested that the giant magnetoresistance peak seen on the insulating side of a superconductor-insulator transition in In$_2$O$_{3-x}$ films is a signature of remanant localized pairs which can participate in variable-range-hopping transport. A theory of pair-transport must necessarily take into account the bosonic nature of the pairs, as opposed to the fermionic nature of single-electron carriers. We show that this opposite statistical nature of the carriers alone can lead to opposite variations of the localization length with magnetic field and thus be a possible candidate for explaining the giant magnetoresistance peak. We further provide an explanation of the pairing mechanism in In$_2$O$_{3-x}$ films. We argue that the electron pairing mechanism here is non-BCS-type and is related instead to the local effect of electron pairs occupying Oxygen vacancies (with charge +2e). The neutral state of these defects may be more stable than the singly-charged defect, as supported by an ab initio analysis. This simple phenomenon leads naturally to a negative-U Hubbard model with strong disorder.

Authors

  • Anirban Gangopadhyay

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Joe Mitchell

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Victor Galitski

    • University of Maryland
    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, College Park
    • JQI, UMD
    • Joint Quantum Institute and Physics Department, University of Maryland
    • JQI, NIST and the University of Maryland
  • Markus Mueller

    • The Abdus Salam International Center for Theoretical Physics
    • The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics