Evidence for the Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless transition in an Al nanofilm grown by molecular beam epitaxy

ORAL

Abstract

In this work, we present experimental evidence for the Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless (BKT) transition in an atomic-scale aluminum nanofilm grown on a GaAs substrate by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). Such a MBE-grown Al film has a higher superconducting critical temperature and a larger critical magnetic field compared to those of bulk Al. In a 4-nm-thick Al film, our results show that V~I3 can occur in both the low-voltage (the BKT transition temperature TBKT =1.97 K) and high-voltage (TBKT =2.17 K) regions where V and I correspond to the voltage across the device and the driving current, respectively. By fitting our data to the vortex/anti-vortex model and a model based on dynamical scaling, we unequivocally determine that TBKT = 2.17 K in our nanofilm. Our new experimental results suggest that when one uses the temperature for which V~I3 to determine TBKT, great care has to be taken as one also needs to fit one's data to both dynamical scaling and vortex/anti-vortex models.

*This work was funded by National Taiwan University (grant number: 107L892101) and the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (grant number: MOST 105-2112-M-002 -005 -MY3).

Presenters

  • Chi-Te Liang

    • Natl Taiwan Univ
    • Physics, National Taiwan University

Authors

  • Chi-Te Liang

    • Natl Taiwan Univ
    • Physics, National Taiwan University
  • Guan-Ming Su

    • Physics, National Taiwan University
  • Ankit Kumar

    • Physics, National Taiwan University
  • Chau-Shing Chang

    • Physics, National Taiwan University
  • Ching-Chen Yeh

    • Physics, National Taiwan University
  • Bi-Yi Wu

    • Physics, National Taiwan University
    • National Institute of Standards and Technology
  • Dinesh Patel

    • Physics, National Taiwan University
  • Yen-Ting Fan

    • Electronics Engineering, National Chiao Tung University
  • Sheng-Di Lin

    • Electronics Engineering, National Chiao Tung University
  • Lee Chow

    • Physics, University of Central Florida