Metallicity and Superconductivity in Doped Strontium Titanate - Sorbonne Université
Article Dans Une Revue Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics Année : 2019

Metallicity and Superconductivity in Doped Strontium Titanate

Résumé

Strontium titanate is a wide-gap semiconductor avoiding a ferroelectric instability thanks to quantum fluctuations. This proximity leads to strong screening of static Coulomb interaction and paves the way for the emergence of a very dilute metal with extremely mobile carriers at liquid-helium temperature. Upon warming, mobility decreases by several orders of magnitude. Yet, metallicity persists above room temperature even when the apparent mean-free-path falls below the electron wavelength. The superconducting instability survives at exceptionally low concentrations and beyond the boundaries of Migdal-Eliashberg approximation. An intimate connection between dilute superconductivity and aborted ferroelectricity is widely suspected. In this review, we will give a brief account of ongoing research on bulk strontium titanate as an insulator, a metal and a superconductor.
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hal-02087087 , version 1 (01-04-2019)

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Clément Collignon, Xiao Lin, Carl Willem Rischau, Benoît Fauqué, Kamran Behnia. Metallicity and Superconductivity in Doped Strontium Titanate. Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics, 2019, 10, pp.25-44. ⟨10.1146/annurev-conmatphys-031218-013144⟩. ⟨hal-02087087⟩
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