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The interplay between disorder and superconductivity has intrigued physicists for decades. Of particular interest is the influence of disorder on the superconducting energy gap $Delta$. In the absence of Coulomb interactions between electrons, disorder leads to emergent granularity of the local order parameter resulting in a pseudogap at temperatures above the critical temperature $T_c$, as well as a finite gap $Delta$ on the insulating side of the disorder-driven superconductor-insulator transition (SIT). At the same time, disorder also enhances the Coulomb interactions, which subsequently may influence $Delta$ in a manner that is still not fully understood. Here we investigate the evolution of the energy gap through the SIT by two different experimental methods: tunneling spectroscopy, in which a metallic electrode is placed close to the studied sample thus screening the Coulomb interactions, and terahertz (THz) spectroscopy, which probes the unscreened sample. The comparison between the two methods illustrates the role played by electronic interactions in determining the nature of the phases across the SIT and sheds light on the mechanisms involved in the destruction of superconductivity.
We provide a microscopic-level derivation of earlier results showing that, in the critical vicinity of the superconductor-to-insulator transition (SIT), disorder and localization become negligible and the structure of the emergent phases is determine
The superconductor-insulator transition (SIT) in regular arrays of Josephson junctions is studied at low temperatures. Near the transition a Ginzburg-Landau type action containing the imaginary time is derived. The new feature of this action is that
We isolated flux disorder effects on the transport at the critical point of the quantum magnetic field tuned Superconductor to Insulator transition (BSIT). The experiments employed films patterned into geometrically disordered hexagonal arrays. Spati
Experimental results of I-V characteristics near the superconductor-insulator transition observed for disorder-tuned YBaCuO thinfilms are presented. The I-V characteristics exibit new quasiperiodic structures as a function of the current. The current
We study theoretically orbital effects of a parallel magnetic field applied to a disordered superconducting film. We find that the field reduces the phase stiffness and leads to strong quantum phase fluctuations driving the system into an insulating