Symmetry-Shaped Singularities in High-Temperature Superconductor H 3 S.
Sebastian R ThomsenMaarten G GoestenPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
The superconducting critical temperature of H 3 S ranks among the highest measured, at 203 K. This impressive value stems from a singularity in the electronic density-of-states, induced by a flat-band region that consists of saddle points. The peak sits right at the Fermi level, so that it gives rise to a giant electron-phonon coupling constant. In this work, we show how atomic orbital interactions and space group symmetry work in concert to shape the singularity. The body-centered cubic Brillouin Zone offers a unique 2D hypersurface in reciprocal space: fully connecting squares with two different high-symmetry points at the corners, Γ and H, and a third one in the center, N. Orbital mixing leads to the collapse of fully connected 1D saddle point lines around the square centers, due to a symmetry-enforced s-p energy inversion between Γ and H. The saddle-point states are invariably nonbonding, which explains the unconventionally weak response of the superconductor's critical temperature to pressure. Although H 3 S appears to be a unique case, the theory shows how it is possible to engineer flat bands and singularities in 3D lattices through symmetry considerations.