Magnetic Field Splitting of the Density of States of Thin Superconductors

Abstract
Using Green's-function techniques, we present a theoretical calculation of the behavior of the density of states, free energy, and order parameter of very thin superconductors in a high magnetic field as a function of spin-orbit and spin-flip impurity scattering. In very thin superconducting films without spin scattering, the upper critical field is determined by the Pauli paramagnetism of the normal-metal electrons. Tunneling measurements by Meservey and Tedrow have shown a spin splitting by 2μBH in energy space of the BCS peak in the density of states. Zero-temperature calculations of the separate up- and down-spin Green's function for a superconductor show that spin-orbit impurities destroy the magnetic field separation of the peaks in the density of states but do not destroy the energy gap. Spin-flip scattering is much more destructive and destroys both the separation of the peaks and the energy gap. We generalize the calculation to T0 and calculate and plot the critical field versus temperature and the magnetic field dependence of the free energy and order parameter for the various values of the spin-orbit and spin-flip parameter. We also use the theoretical calculations to obtain a fit to the low-temperature tunneling data of Meservey and Tedrow between thin Al and a normal metal and the spin-polarized tunneling between thin Al and ferromagnetic metals.