Superconducting properties of MBE-grown 3<i>R</i>-Ta<sub>1+<i>x</i></sub>Se<sub>2</sub> epitaxial thin films

ORAL

Abstract

2D materials research is one of the hot topics in condensed-matter science, but most studies are performed on nanometer-thick crystals fabricated by mechanical exfoliation. On the other hand, researches based on MBE-grown samples are very much limited in particular for transport studies presumably due to difficulties in making high quality thin films. We have recently established a versatile route to layer-by-layer epitaxial growth of a wide variety of 2D materials and their heterostructures on insulating sapphire substrates by MBE [1,2], opening a door for exploration of emergent transport phenomena even based on hardly-cleavable and/or thermodynamically-metastable compounds. In this presentation, we will report MBE growth of thermodynamically-metastable 3R-Ta1+xSe2 epitaxial thin films and their superconducting properties, which turned out to be very much different from those of thermodynamically-stable 2H-TaSe2 in terms of Tc and superconducting anisotropy. [1] M. Nakano et al., Nano Lett. 17, 5595 (2017). [2] Y. Kashiwabara et al., Adv. Funct. Mater. 2019, 1900354 (2019).

*This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Grant Nos. 19H05602, 19H02593, 19H00653, 18K03540, and 15K21732) and A3 Foresight Program from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

Presenters

  • Yuki Tanaka

    • Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo

Authors

  • Yuki Tanaka

    • Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo
  • Hideki Matsuoka

    • Univ of Tokyo
    • Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo
  • Masaki Nakano

    • Univ of Tokyo
    • Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo
  • Yue Wang

    • Univ of Tokyo
    • Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo
  • Sana Sasakura

    • Okayama University
  • Kaya Kobayashi

    • Okayama Univ
    • Okayama University
    • Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University
  • Yoshihiro Iwasa

    • Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo
    • Univ of Tokyo
    • Department of Applied Physics and Quantum-Phase Electronics (QPEC) Center, The University of Tokyo
    • The Univ. of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
    • The University of Tokyo
    • Applied Physics, the University of Tokyo