Enhancement of superconductivity in organic-inorganic hybrid topological materials
ORAL
Abstract
Inducing or enhancing superconductivity in topological materials has attracted extensive research interests partly due to its fundamental importance toward topological superconductivity. Reducing the thickness of transition metal dichalcogenides has provided an important pathway to engineer superconductivity in topological matters, emergent superconductivity with Tc ~ 0.82 K in monolayer WTe2 which also hosts intriguing high-temperature quantum spin Hall effect. However, such monolayer samples are often difficult to obtain and extremely sensitive in air. Here we report a generic, experimentally convenient approach to manipulate the interlayer coupling in bulk MoTe2 and WTe2 single crystals through organic cation intercalation. The as-formed organic-inorganic hybrid crystals exhibit dramatically enhanced superconductivity with Tc of 7.0 K for intercalated MoTe2 (as compared with 0.25 K for bulk crystal) and 2.3 K for intercalated WTe2 (record high compared to monolayer WTe2 and with greatly improved sample stability). This organic-cation-intercalation method can be readily applied to many other layered crystals, forming a promising research platform to manipulate their corresponding electronic states, including possible topological superconductivity with significantly enhanced Tc.
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Presenters
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Haoxiong Zhang
- Tsinghua University