The recent discovery of a superconducting transition at 39 K in MgB2--made of alternating Mg and graphene-like B planes--has raised great interest, for both its technological and theoretical implications. It was clear since the very beginning that the properties of this material are related to an anomalous coupling between the charge carriers in the ? bands--due to in-plane bonds between Boron atoms--and the phonon mode (E2g ) which involves in-plane vibrations of the B ions. Theoretical studies have thus been focused on the search for possible anomalies in the e-ph coupling: one of the first results was the discovery that the E2g phonon is highly anharmonic, but the connection between anharmonicity and Tc in this material is still a controversial point. We first present a detailed first-principles study of the E2g phonon anharmonicity in MgB2 and analogous compounds which are not superconducting, AlBand ? 2+? 2 graphite, and in a hypothetical hole-doped graphiteC2; we then introduce an analytical model which allows us to relate the onset of anharmonicity with the small Fermi energy of the carriers in ? bands. Our study suggests a possible relation between anharmonicity and non-adiabaticity: non-adiabatic effects, which can lead to a sensible increase of Tc with respect to values predicted by conventional theory, become in fact relevant when phonon frequencies are comparable to electronic energy scales.
The origin of phonon anharmonicity in MgB2 and related compounds
E Cappelluti;
2003
Abstract
The recent discovery of a superconducting transition at 39 K in MgB2--made of alternating Mg and graphene-like B planes--has raised great interest, for both its technological and theoretical implications. It was clear since the very beginning that the properties of this material are related to an anomalous coupling between the charge carriers in the ? bands--due to in-plane bonds between Boron atoms--and the phonon mode (E2g ) which involves in-plane vibrations of the B ions. Theoretical studies have thus been focused on the search for possible anomalies in the e-ph coupling: one of the first results was the discovery that the E2g phonon is highly anharmonic, but the connection between anharmonicity and Tc in this material is still a controversial point. We first present a detailed first-principles study of the E2g phonon anharmonicity in MgB2 and analogous compounds which are not superconducting, AlBand ? 2+? 2 graphite, and in a hypothetical hole-doped graphiteC2; we then introduce an analytical model which allows us to relate the onset of anharmonicity with the small Fermi energy of the carriers in ? bands. Our study suggests a possible relation between anharmonicity and non-adiabaticity: non-adiabatic effects, which can lead to a sensible increase of Tc with respect to values predicted by conventional theory, become in fact relevant when phonon frequencies are comparable to electronic energy scales.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


