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Phys. Rev. B 49, 15799–15812 (1994)

Magnetic impurities in superconductors: A theory with different predictions

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Yong-Jihn Kim and A. W. Overhauser
Department of Physics, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907

Received 25 October 1993; published in the issue dated 1 June 1994

The proclivity of paramagnetic solutes to degrade the transition temperature of a traditional singlet-pairing superconductor is studied anew. Tc degradation is proportional to the (conduction electron) spin-disorder scattering rate, 1/τs, caused by the solute spins. Accordingly the Tc loss increases with solute concentration. The initial slope (versus 1/τs) is found to depend on the superconductor and therefore is not the universal constant proposed by Abrikosov and Gor’kov. Instead the decrease is inversely proportional to λ, the electron-phonon coupling constant. Consequently a weak superconductor is doubly jeopardized by paramagnetic impurities: Its superconductivity is easily suppressed not only because Tc is small to begin with, but also because the initial slope is steeper. Another unexpected consequence of the theory involves potential scattering which, acting alone, does not significantly influence Tc (as surmised by Anderson). Nevertheless, the Tc reduction caused by exchange scattering will be partially suppressed when the overall mean free path becomes smaller than the coherence length. This compensation has been demonstrated experimentally by comparing the influence of magnetic impurities in a pure host superconductor with that in a similar host having (also) nonmagnetic solutes. Such observed recovery of Tc, expected from this study, contradicts prior theories for magnetic solutes.

© 1994 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.49.15799
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.49.15799
PACS:
74.20.Fg, 74.62.Bf, 74.90.+n