Observation of Topological Insulating and Superconducting Ground States of Monolayer WTe2

 · Invited

Abstract

Topology and correlations are two fundamental aspects that determine the electronic ground states of condensed matter systems. Both aspects individually have led to striking observations such as the quantum spin Hall insulating state and superconductivity, respectively. The combination of them can result in exotic phenomena including topological superconductivity and non-abelian anyons. In this talk I will report our recent study on monolayer tungsten ditelluride (WTe2), where we find that topology and correlations are simultaneously important in understanding its ground state properties. In the first part, I will talk about our quantum transport measurements for identifying the undoped monolayer WTe2 as a two-dimensional topological insulator. The observation of the quantum spin Hall effect surviving up to 100 Kelvin will be discussed. In the second part, I will report the discovery of superconductivity below 1 Kelvin when the same monolayer is electrostatically doped through boron-nitride dielectric gating. These observations demonstrate that the ground state of the monolayer is remarkably gate-tunable between the two extremes of electronic transport in materials (insulator and superconductor). Our results establish monolayer WTe2 as a new platform for studying rich electronic phenomena driven by topology and correlations, including Majorana states.

*S. W. acknowledges the MIT Pappalardo Fellowship in Physics. This work was supported by FOSR Grant No. FA9550-16-1-0382; the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s EPiQS Initiative through Grant No. GBMF4541; the Center for Excitonics, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the DOE, Basic Energy Scien

Presenters

  • Sanfeng Wu

    • Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Sanfeng Wu

    • Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology