Controlling many-body states by the electric-field effect in a two-dimensional material
Linjun Li, Eoin C. T. O Farrell, Kianping Loh, Goki Eda, Barbaros, Ozyilmaz, Antonio H. Castro Neto

TL;DR
This study demonstrates electric-field control of many-body states in a 2D material, enabling tuning of charge density wave and superconductivity phases, revealing the importance of spatial modulation in 2D superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed control and observation of phase transitions between many-body states in a 2D material via electric field tuning.
Findings
Tuned CDW transition temperature from 170 K to 40 K.
Adjusted superconductivity transition temperature from 0 K to 3 K.
Observed Little Parks oscillations indicating spatially textured superconductivity.
Abstract
To understand complex physics of a system with strong electron electron interactions, it is ideal to control and monitor its properties while tuning an external electric field applied to the system. Indeed, complete electric field control of many body states in strongly correlated electron systems is fundamental to the next generation of condensed matter research and devices. However, the material must be thin enough to avoid shielding of the electric field in bulk material. Two-dimensional materials do not experience electrical screening, and their charge carrier density can be controlled by gating. 1T TiSe2 is a prototypical 2D material that shows charge density wave(CDW) and superconductivity in its phase diagram, presenting several similarities with other layered systems such as copper oxides, iron pnictides, crystals of rare-earth and actinide atoms. By studying 1T TiSe2 single…
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