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The soft ferro-electric phonon in SrTiO3 observed with optical spectroscopy has an extraordinary strong spectral weight which is much stronger than expected in the limit of a perfectly ionic compound. The charged phonon in SrTiO3 is caused by the close-to-covalent character of the Ti-O ionic bond and implies a strong coupling between the soft ferro-electric phonon and the inter band transitions across the 3 eV gap of SrTiO3. We demonstrate that this coupling leads, in addition to the charged phonon effect, to a pairing interaction involving the exchange of two transverse optical phonons. This process owes its relevance to the strong electron-phonon coupling and to the fact that the interaction mediated by a single transverse optical phonon vanishes at low electron density. We use the experimental soft phonon spectral weight to calculate the strength of the bi-phonon mediated pairing interaction in the electron doped material and show that it is of the correct magnitude when compared to the experimental value of the superconducting critical temperature.
SrTiO$_3$ is a unique example of a system which exhibits both quantum paraelectricity and superconductivity. Thus, it is expected that the superconducting state is closely related to the intrinsic ferroelectric instability. Indeed, recent experiments
We constructed an effective tight-binding model with five Cr $3d$ orbitals for LaOCrAs according to first-principles calculations. Basing on this model, we investigated possible superconductivity induced by correlations in doped LaOCrAs using the fun
We investigated the chemical pressure effects on structural and electronic properties of SnTe-based material using partial substitution of Sn by Ag0.5Bi0.5, which results in lattice shrinkage. For Sn1-2x(AgBi)xTe, single-phase polycrystalline samples
SrTiO$_3$ exhibits a superconducting dome upon doping with Nb, with a maximum critical temperature mbox{$T_mathrm{c} approx 0.4$~K}. Using microwave stripline resonators at frequencies from 2 to 23~GHz and temperatures down to 0.02~K, we probe the lo
Strontium ruthenates have many similarities with copper oxide superconductors and are of particular interest for the investigation of the mechanisms and conditions which lead to high-temperature superconductivity. We report here on multiple experimen