Fragile superconductivity in a Dirac metal
Abstract
Studying superconductivity in Dirac semimetals is an important step in understanding quantum matter with topologically non-trivial order parameters. We report on the properties of the superconducting phase in single crystals of the Dirac material LaCuSb2 prepared by the self-flux method. We find that chemical and hydrostatic pressure drastically suppress the superconducting transition. Furthermore, due to large Fermi surface anisotropy, magnetization and muon spin relaxation measurements reveal Type-II superconductivity for applied magnetic fields along the a-axis, and Type-I superconductivity for fields along the c-axis. Specific heat confirms the bulk nature of the transition, and its deviation from single-gap s-wave BCS theory suggests multigap superconductivity. Our tight-binding model points to an anisotropic gap function arising from the spin-orbital texture near the Dirac nodes, providing an explanation for the appearance of an anomaly in specific heat well below Tc. Given the existence of superconductivity in a material harboring Dirac fermions, LaCuSb2 proves an interesting material candidate in the search for topological superconductivity.
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