For
superconductors the energy gap is a region of suppressed density of states around the
Fermi energy, with the size of the energy gap much smaller than the energy scale of the band structure. The superconducting energy gap is a key aspect in the theoretical description of superconductivity and thus features prominently in
BCS theory. Here, the size of the energy gap indicates the energy gain for two electrons upon formation of a
Cooper pair.{{cite book | author = Michael Tinkham | author-link = Michael Tinkham | title = Introduction to Superconductivity | edition = 2nd| publisher = McGraw-Hill BCS theory predicts that the size \Delta of the superconducting energy gap for conventional superconductors at zero temperature scales with their critical temperature T_{\rm c}: \Delta(T=0)=1.764 \, k_{\rm B} T_{\rm c} (with
Boltzmann constant k_{\rm B}). ==Pseudogap==