The role of disorder and electron-electron interactions in the superconductor-insulator transition of molybdenum disulfide

ORAL

Abstract

The 2D layered transition-metal dichalcogenide, MoS2, first garnered interest over 40 years ago when it was discovered that it becomes a superconductor (SC) after electrochemical intercalation with alkali- or alkali-earth metals. Recently, however, a superconductor-insulator (SI) transition was observed in MoS2 by electric-field gating with ionic liquid (IL) dielectrics, substances that enable induced charge-carrier concentrations (n) much larger than are possible using conventional solid-state dielectric gate barriers. Despite this feat, detailed studies of gate-tuned metal-insulator transitions in MoS2 have mainly focused on the understanding the various mobility-reducing scattering mechanisms thought to contribute to the smaller than predicted on/off ratios observed in MoS2-based FETs. In this presentation, we discuss the results of an investigation into the role of disorder and electron-electron interactions in the SI transition of mechanically-exfoliated multilayer and CVD-grown few-layer MoS2 probed by carefully examining their low temperature magneto-transport properties as a function of charge carrier-concentration via IL-gating.

Authors

  • Joseph Prestigiacomo

    • NRC Postdoctoral Fellow: US Naval Research Laboratory
  • Anindya Nath

    • George Mason University
    • George Mason University Postdoctoral fellow in-residence at U.S. Naval Research Lab, Washington DC
  • Anthony K Boyd

    • ASEE Postdoctoral Fellow: US Naval Research Laboratory
    • ASEE Postdoctoral Fellow in-residence at U.S. Naval Research Lab, Washington DC
  • Qingfeng Liu

    • Kansas State University
  • Judy Wu

    • Kansas State University
  • Thomas Sutto

    • US Naval Research Laboratory
  • Michael Osofsky

    • US Naval Research Laboratory
    • Naval Research Laboratory