Effect of a spin-active interface on proximity-induced superconductivity in topological insulators

ORAL

Abstract

We examine the effect of a spin-active interface on the symmetry of proximity-induced superconducting pairing amplitudes in topological insulators. We employ diagramatic techniques to investigate the leading order contribution to the pairing amplitude considering 3 different kinds of spin-active interfaces: 1) those for which the interface leads to the wavefunctions of transmitted electrons picking up spin-dependent phases in addition to flipping the spin of transmitted electrons, 2) those with only spin-dependent phases and no spin-flipping, and 3) those with only spin-flipping and no spin-dependent phases. We find that in cases (1) and (2) a considerable odd-frequency spinful-triplet pairing is induced in the TI while for case (3) no spin triplet pairing is induced to leading order. We compare our results to those for a normal metal and ferromagnetic materials finding that the nontrivial spin structure of the TI leads to qualitatively different behavior.

*Work supported in part by ONR, grant number ONR-N00014-13-1-0321

Authors

  • Christopher Triola

    • Department of Physics, College of William and Mary
    • Physics Department of William and Mary College
    • College of William \& Mary
  • Enrico Rossi

    • Department of Physics, College of William and Mary
  • Alexander Balatsky

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Theoretical Division and Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Los Alamos National Laboratory and Nordic Institute of Theoretical Physics (Nordita)