Superconductivity mediated by quantum critical antiferromagnetic fluctuations: the rise and fall of hot spots

ORAL

Abstract

The maximum transition temperature T$_{c}$ observed in the phase diagrams of several unconventional superconductors takes place in the vicinity of a putative antiferromagnetic quantum critical point. This observation motivated the theoretical proposal that superconductivity in these systems may be driven by quantum critical fluctuations, which in turn can also promote non-Fermi liquid behavior. In this talk, we present a combined analytical and sign-problem-free Quantum Monte Carlo investigation of the spin-fermion model -- a widely studied low-energy model for the interplay between superconductivity and magnetic fluctuations. By engineering a series of band dispersions that interpolate between near-nested and open Fermi surfaces, and by also varying the strength of the spin-fermion interaction, we find that the hot spots of the Fermi surface provide the dominant contribution to the pairing instability in this model. We show that the analytical expressions for T$_{c}$ and for the pairing susceptibility, obtained within a large-N Eliashberg approximation to the spin-fermion model, agree well with the Quantum Monte Carlo data, even in the regime of interactions comparable to the electronic bandwidth.

*DE-SC0012336

Authors

  • Xiaoyu Wang

    • Univ of Minn - Minneapolis
  • Yoni Schattner

    • Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel 76100
  • Erez Berg

    • Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel 76100
  • Rafael Fernandes

    • Univ of Minn - Minneapolis