Superconductivity in CuCl/Si: possible excitonic pairing?

Abstract

The search for superconductivity with higher transition temperature (TC) has long been a challenge in research efforts ever since its first discovery in 1911. The effort has led to the discovery of various kinds of superconductors and progress in the understanding of this intriguing phenomenon. The increase of TC has also evolved; however, the dream of realizing room-temperature superconductivity is far from reality. For superconductivity to emerge, the effective quasiparticle interaction should overcome the repulsive Coulomb interaction. This can be realized via lattice or spin degrees of freedom. An alternative pairing mechanism, the excitonic mechanism, was proposed 50 years ago, hoping to achieve higher TC than by phonon mediation. As none of physics principles has ever prevented excitonic pairing, the excitonic pairing mechanism is revisited here and we show that the effective quasiparticle interaction without lattice and spin can be attractive solely electronically.

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