79 research outputs found

    Signatures of a Pressure-Induced Topological Quantum Phase Transition in BiTeI

    Full text link
    We report the observation of two signatures of a pressure-induced topological quantum phase transition in the polar semiconductor BiTeI using x-ray powder diffraction and infrared spectroscopy. The x-ray data confirm that BiTeI remains in its ambient-pressure structure up to 8 GPa. The lattice parameter ratio c/a shows a minimum between 2.0-2.9 GPa, indicating an enhanced c-axis bonding through pz band crossing as expected during the transition. Over the same pressure range, the infrared spectra reveal a maximum in the optical spectral weight of the charge carriers, reflecting the closing and reopening of the semiconducting band gap. Both of these features are characteristics of a topological quantum phase transition, and are consistent with a recent theoretical proposal.Comment: revised final versio

    Evidence of Ising pairing in superconducting NbSe2_2 atomic layers

    Full text link
    Two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides with strong spin-orbit interactions and valley-dependent Berry curvature effects have attracted tremendous recent interests. Although novel single-particle and excitonic phenomena related to spin-valley coupling have been extensively studied, effects of spin-momentum locking on collective quantum phenomena remain unexplored. Here we report an observation of superconducting monolayer NbSe2_2 with an in-plane upper critical field over six times of the Pauli paramagnetic limit by magneto-transport measurements. The effect can be understood in terms of the competing Zeeman effect and large intrinsic spin-orbit interactions in non-centrosymmetric NbSe2_2 monolayers, where the electronic spin is locked to the out-of-plane direction. Our results provide a strong evidence of unconventional Ising pairing protected by spin-momentum locking and open up a new avenue for studies of non-centrosymmetric superconductivity with unique spin and valley degrees of freedom in the exact two-dimensional limit

    Patterns and driving forces of dimensionality-dependent charge density waves in 2H-type transition metal dichalcogenides

    Full text link
    Two-dimensional (2D) materials have become a fertile playground for the exploration and manipulation of novel collective electronic states. Recent experiments have unveiled a variety of robust 2D orders in highly-crystalline materials ranging from magnetism to ferroelectricity and from superconductivity to charge density wave (CDW) instability. The latter, in particular, appears in diverse patterns even within the same family of materials with isoelectronic species. Furthermore, how they evolve with dimensionality has so far remained elusive. Here we propose a general framework that provides a unfied picture of CDW ordering in the 2H polytype of four isoelectronic transition metal dichalcogenides 2H-MX2_2 (M=Nb, Ta and X=S, Se). We first show experimentally that whilst NbSe2_2 exhibits a strongly enhanced CDW order in the 2D limit, the opposite trend exists for TaSe2_2 and TaS2_2, with CDW being entirely absent in NbS2_2 from its bulk to the monolayer. Such distinct behaviours are then demonstrated to be the result of a subtle, yet profound, competition between three factors: ionic charge transfer, electron-phonon coupling, and the spreading extension of the electronic wave functions. Despite its simplicity, our approach can, in essence, be applied to other quasi-2D materials to account for their CDW response at different thicknesses, thereby shedding new light on this intriguing quantum phenomenon and its underlying mechanisms

    Far-Infrared Conductivity Measurements of Pair Breaking in Superconducting Nb0.5_{0.5}Ti0.5_{0.5}N Thin Films Induced by an External Magnetic Field

    Full text link
    We report the complex optical conductivity of a superconducting thin-film of Nb0.5_{0.5}Ti0.5_{0.5}N in an external magnetic field. The field was applied parallel to the film surface and the conductivity extracted from far-infrared transmission and reflection measurements. The real part shows the superconducting gap, which we observe to be suppressed by the applied magnetic field. We compare our results with the pair-breaking theory of Abrikosov and Gor'kov and confirm directly the theory's validity for the optical conductivity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Strongly enhanced charge-density-wave order in monolayer NbSe2_2

    Full text link
    Two-dimensional (2D) atomic materials possess very different properties from their bulk counterparts. While changes in the single-particle electronic properties have been extensively investigated, modifications in the many-body collective phenomena in the exact 2D limit, where interaction effects are strongly enhanced, remain mysterious. Here we report a combined optical and electrical transport study on the many-body collective-order phase diagram of 2D NbSe2_2. Both the charge density wave (CDW) and the superconducting phase have been observed down to the monolayer limit. While the superconducting transition temperature (TCT_C) decreases with lowering the layer thickness, the newly observed CDW transition temperature (TCDWT_{\mathrm{CDW}}) increases drastically from 33 K in the bulk to 145 K in the monolayers. Such highly unusual enhancement of CDWs in atomically thin samples can be understood as a result of significantly enhanced electron-phonon interactions in 2D NbSe2_2, which cause a crossover from the weak coupling to the strong coupling limit. This is supported by the large blueshift of the collective amplitude vibrations observed in our experiment
    • …
    corecore