Disordered two-dimensional superconductors: roles of temperature and interaction strength
Abstract
We have considered the half-filled disordered attractive Hubbard model on a square lattice, in which the on-site attraction is switched off on a fraction of sites, while keeping a finite on the remaining ones. Through Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations for several values of and , and for system sizes ranging from to , we have calculated the configurational averages of the equal-time pair structure factor , and, for a more restricted set of variables, the helicity modulus, , as functions of temperature. Two finite-size scaling {\it ansatze} for have been used, one for zero-temperature and the other for finite temperatures. We have found that the system sustains superconductivity in the ground state up to a critical impurity concentration, , which increases with , at least up to U=4 (in units of the hopping energy). Also, the normalized zero-temperature gap as a function of shows a maximum near , for . Analyses of the helicity modulus and of the pair structure factor led to the determination of the critical temperature as a function of , for 4 and 6: they also show maxima near , with the highest increasing with in this range. We argue that, overall, the observed behavior results from both the breakdown of CDW-superconductivity degeneracy and the fact that free sites tend to "push" electrons towards attractive sites, the latter effect being more drastic at weak couplings.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0807.3931,
title = {Disordered two-dimensional superconductors: roles of temperature and interaction strength},
author = {Felipe Mondaini and Thereza Paiva and Raimundo R. dos Santos and R. T. Scalettar},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0807.3931},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
9 two-column pages, 14 figures, RevTeX