This paper addresses the transition from the normal to the superfluid state in strongly correlated two dimensional fermionic superconductors and Fermi gases. We arrive at the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless (BKT) temperature T BKT as a function of attractive pairing strength by associating it with the onset of 'quasi-condensation' in the normal phase. Our approach builds on a criterion for determining the BKT transition temperature for atomic gases which is based on a well established quantum Monte Carlo analysis of the phase space density. This latter quantity, when derived from BCS-BEC crossover theory for fermions, leads to non-monotonic behavior for T BKT as a function of the attractive interaction or inverse scattering length. In Fermi gases, this implies a robust superconducting dome followed by a long tail from the flat BEC asymptote, rather similar to what is observed experimentally. For lattice systems we find that T BKT has an absolute maximum of the order of 0.1E F. We discuss how our results compare with those derived from the Nelson-Kosterlitz criterion based on the mean field superfluid density and the approach to the transition from below. While there is agreement in the strict mean-field BCS regime at weak coupling, we find that at moderate pairing strength bosonic excitations cause a substantial increase in T BKT followed by an often dramatic decrease before the system enters the BEC regime.
CITATION STYLE
Wang, X., Chen, Q., & Levin, K. (2020). Strong pairing in two dimensions: Pseudogaps, domes, and other implications. New Journal of Physics, 22(6). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab890b
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.