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As a preface to the discussion of the superconducting pairing mechanism
in A3, a brief summary of the strong-coupling theory
of superconductivity is included here.
The ``strength'' of the electron-electron attractive coupling
is measured by the dimensionless coupling constant,
.In the BCS theory , and the
boundary between the ``weak'' and ``strong'' coupling regimes is[49]
about with the weak-coupling limit being
and the infinitely strong-coupling
limit being .
The theory of Bardeen, Cooper and Schrieffer treated only the simplest
form of attractive interaction between electrons, i.e. the
interaction V(E) was simply a constant (independent of energy, direction or
temperature) for E within the Debye energy of the Fermi energy and zero
outside of this range.
A more realistic and general treatment of the electron-phonon interaction,
which allows both for structure to the interaction and strong
electron-phonon coupling was first accomplished by Eliashberg[50].
For general reviews of this topic the reader is referred to the works
of Scalapino[49], McMillan and Rowell [51], and the
more recent review of Carbotte [52].
The general electron-phonon interaction hamiltonian is
where is the annihilator for a phonon at
wavevector with branch index , is the annihilator for an electron at
wavevector and spin , M is the interaction, and
.The phonon density of states is
where is the -branch phonon
dispersion curve.
In the Eliashberg theory, this
interaction is included via a Fermi Surface (FS) average
coupling-constant phonon density of states product:
where AFS is the area of the Fermi Surface and
is the ``dressed'' electron-phonon interaction M
which includes the effect of Coulomb renormalization
(see p.481 of [49]).
The function contains all the relevant information about
the electron-phonon coupling giving rise to the effective attractive
interaction between electrons which produces the superconductivity.
However it turns out that in many cases the important information
in this distribution is not in its details, but simply in two of
its ``moments'': the mass enhancement parameter and
the logarithmic moment, which are defined by:
The effective electron mass modified by the electron-phonon interaction is
just .
The theory of superconductivity based on this general approach to the
electron-phonon interaction is summarized in the Eliashberg equations,
which are coupled non-linear self-consistent equations which take the
place of the BCS gap equation and include the BCS gap equation
as a special case. From these equations, McMillan
(see e.g. [51] and references therein)
developed an equation for Tc analogous to the BCS equation
(Eq. 1.2) which was subsequently improved by others (see
[52]). It reads
The as yet undefined parameter in the above represents the
electron-electron Coulomb interaction and is discussed further below.
The parameterization of the dimensionless coupling in terms
of V and g(0) has evidently been replaced. In fact,
correspondence with the BCS theory gives
The argument of the exponential function in the McMillan equation
(Eq. 1.9) is not simply , as it was in the
BCS theory. This is because the the form is only
approximate. From Eq. 1.10, we see that for an infinite
electron-phonon mass renormalization (),
the dimensionless coupling parameter , i.e.
this is the infinitely strong-coupling limit.
A representative range for in conventional superconductors
is 0.4-3.0[52].
For the range of parameters found in real materials, the following
approximate form for the important ratio of the energy gap to Tc
(analogous to the BCS result 1.3)
has been found (see [52])
For real superconductors this ratio is, for the weak-coupling limit,
close to the BCS value of 3.52, and for stronger coupling materials
it ranges up to about 5.1. Thus the broad range of reported values
(Table 1.1) encompasses both the weak-coupling and
strong-coupling regimes.
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