| Literature DB >> 33689385 |
Daniel A Rhodes1,2, Apoorv Jindal3, Noah F Q Yuan4, Younghun Jung1, Abhinandan Antony1, Hua Wang5, Bumho Kim1, Yu-Che Chiu6, Takashi Taniguchi7, Kenji Watanabe7, Katayun Barmak8, Luis Balicas6, Cory R Dean3, Xiaofeng Qian5, Liang Fu4, Abhay N Pasupathy3, James Hone3.
Abstract
Crystalline two-dimensional (2D) superconductors (SCs) with low carrier density are an exciting new class of materials in which electrostatic gating can tune superconductivity, electronic interactions play a prominent role, and electrical transport properties may directly reflect the topology of the Fermi surface. Here, we report the dramatic enhancement of superconductivity with decreasing thickness in semimetallic Td-MoTe2, with critical temperature (Tc) increasing up to 7.6 K for monolayers, a 60-fold increase with respect to the bulk Tc. We show that monolayers possess a similar electronic structure and density of states (DOS) as the bulk, implying that electronic interactions play a strong role in the enhanced superconductivity. Reflecting the low carrier density, the critical temperature, magnetic field, and current density are all tunable by an applied gate voltage. The response to high in-plane magnetic fields is distinct from that of other 2D SCs and reflects the canted spin texture of the electron pockets.Entities:
Keywords: 2D Superconductivity; Two-dimensional materials; Weyl semimetal; gate-tunable
Year: 2021 PMID: 33689385 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c04935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189