Tunneling Spectroscopy of Gap Anisotropy in Niobium

ORAL

Abstract

The anistropic gap of pure superconducting Niobium has been calculated based on Eliashberg theory with the electron-phonon coupling and phonon density of states computed from density functional theory [1]. Quasiparticle tunneling experiments can in principle reveal the gap structure on the Niobium Fermi surfaces [2]. The tunneling conductance is a convolution of the angle-resolved local density of states on the Fermi surface, the angle-dependent transmission probability, and the derivative of the Fermi distribution function. NIS tunneling normal to different crystalline orientations allows one to determine the gap structure in the high-symmetry directions of the Fermi surface. The gap structure on different sheets can also be revealed if the difference in energy between the gaps for the same direction k/|k| is large compared to 3.5 kBT. We report results for the tunneling conductance expected for a number of Niobium crystal orientations. Comparison with recent experimental measurements are reported.

[1] Mehdi Zarea, Hikaru Ueki, and J. A. Sauls. “Effects of anisotropy and disorder on the superconducting properties of Niobium,” arXiv:2201.07403 (2022).

[2] E.L. Wolf, Principles of electron tunneling spectroscopy, Oxford University Press (2012).

*This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science Research Centers, Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center (SQMS) under contract number DE-AC02-07CH11359.

Presenters

  • Abdulaziz Abogoda

    • Northwestern University

Authors

  • Abdulaziz Abogoda

    • Northwestern University