Unconventional High Temperature Superconductivity in Cubic Zinc-blende Transition Metal Compounds

ORAL

Abstract

Recently, we have identified a key character, called high temperature superconductivity "gene", which separates the cuprates and iron-based superconductors from other transitional metal compounds, and proposed some candidates for unconventional superconductivity. All of them are quasi-two dimensional. Here we propose a three dimensional candiate, transition metal compounds in a cubic zinc-blende lattice with electronic filling d^7. We argue that upon doping, this electronic environment can be one of ``genes" to host unconventional high temperature superconductivity with a time reversal symmetry broken d+id pairing symmetry. With gappless nodal points along the diagonal directions, this state is a direct three dimensional analogue to the two dimensional B1g d-wave state in cuprates. We suggest that such a case may be realized in electron doped zinc-blende CoN.
Ref: arXiv:1910.10904

*Q. Zhang acknowledges the support from the International Young Scientist Fellowship of Institute of Physics CAS (Grant No. 2017002) and the Postdoctoral International Program (2017) from China Postdoctoral Science Foundation.

Presenters

  • Qiang Zhang

    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Authors

  • Qiang Zhang

    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Kun Jiang

    • Boston College
    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
    • Physics, Boston College
    • Department of Physics, Boston College
  • Yuhao Gu

    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Science
  • Jiangping Hu

    • Chinese Academy of Sciences,Institute of Physics
    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
    • Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Science,Beijing 100190, China
    • Beijing National Research Center for Condensed Matter Physics, and Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Science