Superconductivity from On-Chip Metallization on 2D Topological Chalcogenides
Yanyu Jia, Guo Yu, Tiancheng Song, Fang Yuan, Ayelet J Uzan, Yue Tang,, Pengjie Wang, Ratnadwip Singha, Michael Onyszczak, Zhaoyi Joy Zheng, Kenji, Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Leslie M Schoop, Sanfeng Wu

TL;DR
This paper presents a controllable on-chip metallization technique that induces robust superconductivity in various 2D topological transition metal dichalcogenides, enabling new quantum material applications.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel, highly controllable 2D metallization process that converts TMDs into superconductors, including topological phases, using ultrathin Palladium layers.
Findings
Superconductivity successfully introduced into monolayer and bilayer TMDs.
The process is compatible with existing nanofabrication techniques.
Induced superconductivity coexists with topological phases in TMDs.
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) is a versatile class of quantum materials of interest to various fields including, e.g., nanoelectronics, optical devices, and topological and correlated quantum matter. Tailoring the electronic properties of TMDs is essential to their applications in many directions. Here, we report that a highly controllable and uniform on-chip 2D metallization process converts a class of atomically thin TMDs into robust superconductors, a property belonging to none of the starting materials. As examples, we demonstrate the introduction of superconductivity into a class of 2D air-sensitive topological TMDs, including monolayers of Td-WTe2, 1T'-MoTe2 and 2H-MoTe2, as well as their natural and twisted bilayers, metalized with an ultrathin layer of Palladium. This class of TMDs are known to exhibit intriguing topological phases ranging from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic properties of thin films · Theoretical and Computational Physics · Topological Materials and Phenomena
