Chiral superconductivity from repulsive interactions in doped graphene
Abstract
We identify graphene as a system where chiral superconductivity can be realized. Chiral superconductivity involves a pairing gap that winds in phase around the Fermi surface, breaking time reversal symmetry. We consider a unique situation arising in graphene at a specific level of doping, where the density of states is singular, strongly enhancing the critical temperature Tc. At this doping level, the Fermi surface is nested, allowing superconductivity to emerge from repulsive electron-electron interactions. We show using a renormalization group method that superconductivity dominates over all competing orders for any choice of weak repulsive interactions. Superconductivity develops in a doubly degenerate, spin singlet channel, and a mean field calculation indicates that the superconductivity is of a chiral d+id type. We therefore predict that doped graphene can provide experimental realization of spin-singlet chiral superconductivity.
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