Disorder and magnetic field induced Bose-metal state in two-dimensional Ta$_x$(SiO$_2$)$_{1-x}$ granular films
Zhi-Hao He, Hua-Yao Tu, Kuang-Hong Gao, Guo-Lin Yu, and Zhi-Qing Li

TL;DR
This study investigates the anomalous metallic state in two-dimensional Ta$_x$(SiO$_2$)$_{1-x}$ granular films, revealing that disorder and magnetic fields induce a Bose-metal state characterized by unique scaling laws linked to superconducting quantum fluctuations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the anomalous metallic state in these granular films is bosonic and governed by dynamical gauge field fluctuations, supported by observed scaling laws.
Findings
Disorder and magnetic field induce a Bose-metal state.
The resistance exhibits unique scaling laws near transitions.
The metallic state is driven by superconducting quantum fluctuations.
Abstract
The origin of the intermediate anomalous metallic state in two-dimensional superconductor materials remains enigmatic. In the present paper, we observe such a state in a series of 9.0 nm thick Ta(SiO) ( being the volume fraction of Ta) nanogranular films. At zero field, the 0.75 films undergo a Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition as transform from normal to superconducing states upon cooling. For the 0.71 films, the resistance increases with decreasing temperature from 2 K down to 40 mK. A normal state to anomalous metallic state transition is observed in the 0.73 film, i.e., near the transition temperature, the resistance of the film decreases sharply upon cooling as if the system would cross over to superconducting state, but then saturates to a value far less than that in normal state. When a small magnetic…
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