We describe boundary effects in superconducting systems with Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) superconducting instability, using Bogoliubov-de-Gennes and Ginzburg-Landau formalisms. Firstly, we show that in dimensions larger than one the standard Ginzburg-Landau (GL) functional formalism for FFLO superconductors is unbounded from below. This is demonstrated by finding solutions with zero Laplacian terms near boundaries. We generalize the GL formalism for these systems by retaining higher order terms. Next, we demonstrate that a cubic superconductor with imbalanced fermions, at a mean-field level has a sequence of the phase transitions. At low temperatures it forms Larkin-Ovchinnikov state in the bulk but has a different modulation pattern close to the boundaries. When temperature is increased the first phase transition occurs when the bulk of the material becomes normal while the surfaces remain superconducting. The second transition occurs at higher temperature where the system retains superconductivity on the edges. The third transition is associated with the loss of edge-superconductivity while retaining superconducting gap in the vertices. We obtain the same sequence of phase transition by numerically solving the Bogoliubov-de Gennes model.
One of the defining features of spontaneously broken time-reversal symmetry (BTRS) is the existence of domain walls, the detection of which would be strong evidence for such systems. There is keen interest in BTRS currently, in part, due to recent muon spin rotation experiments, which have pointed towards Ba 1−x K x Fe 2 As 2 exhibiting a remarkable case of s-wave superconductivity with spontaneously broken time-reversal symmetry. A key question, however, is how to differentiate between the different theoretical models which describe such a state. Two particularly popular choices of model are s + is and s + id superconducting states. In this paper, we obtain solutions for domain walls in s + is and s + id systems, including the effects of lattice anisotropies. We show that, in general, both models exhibit spontaneous magnetic fields that extend along the entire length of the domain wall. We demonstrate the qualitative difference between the magnetic signatures of s + is and s + id domain walls and propose a procedure to extract the superconducting pairing symmetry from the magnetic-field response of domain walls.
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