Electron Attraction Mediated by Coulomb Repulsion
Assaf Hamo, Avishai Benyamini, Ilanit Shapir, Ilya Khivrich, Jonah, Waissman, Kristen Kaasbjerg, Yuval Oreg, Felix von Oppen, Shahal Ilani

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that electrons can be made to attract each other through an excitonic mechanism using quantum devices from carbon nanotubes, providing experimental evidence for a long-theorized but unconfirmed phenomenon.
Contribution
The authors experimentally realize and control excitonic electron attraction in a quantum device, offering new insights into electron pairing mechanisms beyond conventional superconductivity.
Findings
Electrons can be made to attract each other via an excitonic mechanism.
Transport signatures confirm the presence of excitonic pairing.
The system's tunability reveals the dependence of attraction on repulsion.
Abstract
One of the defining properties of electrons is their mutual Coulombic repulsion. In solids, however, this basic property may change. A famous example is that of superconductors, where coupling to lattice vibrations make electrons attract each other and leads to the formation of bound pairs. But what if all degrees of freedom are electronic? Is it still possible to make electrons attractive via their repulsion from other electrons? Such a mechanism, termed 'excitonic', was proposed fifty years ago by W. A. Little, aiming to achieve stronger and more exotic superconductivity, yet despite many experimental efforts, direct evidence for such 'excitonic' attraction is still lacking. Here, we demonstrate this unique attraction by constructing, from the bottom up, the fundamental building block of this mechanism. Our experiments are based on quantum devices made from pristine carbon nanotubes,…
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