Strain-induced time reversal breaking and half quantum vortices near a putative superconducting tetra-critical point in Sr<sub>2</sub>RuO<sub>4</sub>
ORAL
Abstract
It has been shown that many seemingly contradictory experimental findings concerning the superconducting state in Sr2RuO4 can be accounted for as resulting from the existence of an assumed tetra-critical point at near ambient pressure at which $d_{x^2-y^2}$ and $g_{xy(x^2-y^2)}$ superconducting states are degenerate. We perform both a Landau-Ginzburg and a microscopic mean-field analysis of the effect of spatially varying strain on such a state. In the presence of finite $xy$ shear strain, the superconducting state consists of two possible symmetry-related time-reversal symmetry (TRS) preserving states: $d \pm g$. However, at domain walls between two such regions, TRS can be broken, resulting in a $d+ig$ state. More generally, we find that various natural patterns of spatially varying strain induce a rich variety of superconducting textures, including half-quantum fluxoids. These results may resolve some of the apparent inconsistencies between the theoretical proposal and various experimental observations, including the suggestive evidence of half-quantum vortices.
*SAK and AY were supported, in part, by NSF grant No.DMR-2000987 at Stanford.EB was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under grant HQMAT (Grant Agreement No. 817799), the Israel-US Binational Science Foundation (BSF), and a Research grant from Irving and Cherna Moskowitz
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Publication: Phys. Rev. B 104, 054518; arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.00935
Presenters
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Andrew C Yuan
- Stanford University