We report the direct evidence for superconductivity in Ca-intercalated bilayer graphene C6CaC6, which is regarded as the thinnest limit of Ca-intercalated graphite. We performed the electrical transport measurements with the in situ 4-point-probe method in ultrahigh vacuum under zero- or nonzero-magnetic field for pristine bilayer graphene, Li-intercalated bilayer graphene (C6LiC6) and C6CaC6 fabricated on SiC substrate. We observed that the zero-resistance state occurs in C6CaC6 with the onset temperature (T(c)(onset)) of 4 K, while the T(c)(onset) is gradually decreased upon applying the magnetic field. This directly proves the superconductivity origin of the zero resistance in C6CaC6. On the other hand, both pristine bilayer graphene and C6LiC6 exhibit nonsuperconducting behavior, suggesting the importance of intercalated atoms and its species to drive the superconductivity.
A one-atom-layer compound made of one monolayer of Tl and one-third monolayer of Pb on a Si(111) surface having √3×√3 periodicity was found to exhibit a giant Rashba-type spin splitting of metallic surface-state bands together with two-dimensional superconducting transport properties. Temperature-dependent angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy revealed an enhanced electron-phonon coupling for one of the spin-split bands. In situ micro-four-point-probe conductivity measurements with and without magnetic field demonstrated that the (Tl, Pb)/Si(111) system transformed into the superconducting state at 2.25 K, followed by the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless mechanism. The 2D Tl-Pb compound on Si(111) is believed to be the prototypical object for prospective studies of intriguing properties of the superconducting 2D system with lifted spin degeneracy, bearing in mind that its composition, atomic and electron band structures, and spin texture are already well established.
We performed in situ magnetotransport measurements on ultrathin Bi(111) films [4-30 bilayers (BLs), 16-120 Å thick] to elucidate the role of bulk or surface states in the transport phenomena. We found that the temperature dependence of the film conductivity shows no thickness dependence for the 6-16 BL films and is affected by the electron-electron scattering, suggesting surface-state dominant contribution. In contrast, the weak antilocalization effect observed by applying a magnetic field shows clear thickness dependence, indicating bulk transport. This apparent inconsistency is explained by a coherent bulk-surface coupling that produces a single channel transport. For the films thicker than 20 BLs, the behavior changes drastically which can likely be interpreted as a bulk dominant conduction.
Ca-intercalation has enabled superconductivity in graphene on SiC. However, the atomic and electronic structures that are critical for superconductivity are still under discussion. We find an essential role of the interface between monolayer graphene and the SiC substrate for superconductivity. In the Ca-intercalation process, at the interface a carbon layer terminating SiC changes to graphene by Ca-termination of SiC (monolayer graphene becomes a bilayer), inducing more electrons than a free-standing model. Then, Ca is intercalated in between the graphene layers, which shows superconductivity with the updated critical temperature (T C ) of up to 5.7 K. In addition, the relation between T C and the normal-state conductivity is unusual, "dome-shaped". These findings are beyond the simple C 6 CaC 6 model in which s-wave BCS superconductivity is theoretically predicted. This work proposes a general picture of the intercalation-induced superconductivity in graphene on SiC and indicates the potential for superconductivity induced by other intercalants.
Realization of unconventional physical properties in two-dimensional (2D) transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) is currently one of the key challenges in condensed-matter systems. However, the electronic properties of 2D TMDs remain largely unexplored compared to those of their bulk counterparts. Here, we report the fabrication of a high-quality monolayer NbSe 2 film with a trigonal prismatic structure by molecular beam epitaxy, and the study of its electronic properties by scanning tunneling microscopy, angleresolved photoemission spectroscopy, and electrical transport measurements, together with first-principles band-structure calculations. In addition to a charge density wave (CDW) with 3 × 3 periodicity and superconductivity below 1.5 K, we observed sizable (~0.1 eV) band splitting along the Γ-K cut in the Brillouin zone due to inversion symmetry breaking in the monolayer crystal. This splitting is highly anisotropic in k space, leading to a spin-split van-Hove singularity in the band structure. The present results suggest the importance of spin-orbit coupling and symmetry breaking for unconventional superconductivity and CDW properties in monolayer TMDs.
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