Demystifying the growth of superconducting Sr2RuO4 thin films

 · Invited

Abstract

Sr2RuO4 is an unconventional superconductor with potentially a spin-triplet, odd-parity superconducting ground state. There are many reports of high purity single crystals of Sr2RuO4 with a Tc onset of up to 1.5 K. Furthermore, recent studies have shown that the Tc can be further increased up to 3.5 K using uniaxial strain. To date, however, there are only two published reports of superconducting Sr2RuO4 thin films. This relative paucity of superconducting thin films is likely due to the extreme sensitivity of the odd-parity superconducting ground state in Sr2RuO4 to disorder, with the dominant defect in films being out-of-phase boundaries. According to recent theoretical predictions biaxially strained epitaxial thin films with isotropic in-plane strain can potentially maintain the topologically nontrivial px ± ipy superconducting ground state while simultaneously enhancing Tc by tuning the Fermi level towards a van Hove singularity. Thin films also provide a pathway for scalability, which is critical for potential practical applications of spin-triplet superconductors such as qubits for ground-state quantum computing. In this talk I outline and demonstrate a thermodynamic growth window to achieve repeatable growth of superconducting Sr2RuO4 thin films using molecular-beam epitaxy. I hope that identifying this growth window and demystifying the growth process will enable superconducting Sr2RuO4 thin films to be routinely grown by many groups. This would enable widespread studies into this extremely interesting unconventional superconductor.

*This research is funded by the W.M. Keck Foundation and by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s EPiQS Initiative through Grant GBMF3850 to Cornell University.

Presenters

  • Hari Nair

    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University
    • Cornell Univ
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University

Authors

  • Hari Nair

    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University
    • Cornell Univ
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University
  • Nathaniel Schreiber

    • Cornell Univ
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University
  • Jacob Ruf

    • Department of Physics, Cornell University
  • Morgan Grandon

    • Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University
  • David Low

    • Cornell University
    • Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University
  • George Ferguson

    • Cornell University
    • Department of Physics, Cornell University
    • Cornell Univ
  • Erich Mueller

    • Cornell University
    • Department of Physics, Cornell University
    • Cornell Univ
  • Kyle Shen

    • Physics, Cornell University
    • Department of Physics, Cornell University
    • Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell University
    • Cornell University
    • Cornell Univ
  • Darrell Schlom

    • Materials Science, Cornell University
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University
    • Department of Material Science and Engineering, Cornell University
    • Cornell University
    • Cornell Univ
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University