Superconductivity and spin canting in spin-orbit proximitized rhombohedral trilayer graphene
Caitlin L. Patterson, Owen I. Sheekey, Trevor B. Arp, Ludwig F. W., Holleis, Jin Ming Koh, Youngjoon Choi, Tian Xie, Siyuan Xu, Evgeny Redekop,, Grigory Babikyan, Haoxin Zhou, Xiang Cheng, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji, Watanabe, Chenhao Jin, Etienne Lantagne-Hurtubise, Jason Alicea

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that spin-orbit coupling in rhombohedral trilayer graphene enhances superconductivity and induces a transition between spin-canted and spin-valley locked states, revealing a new mechanism for superconductivity enhancement.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence that spin-orbit coupling increases superconducting critical temperature by affecting spin canting, supported by theoretical Hartree-Fock calculations.
Findings
Superconductivity is enhanced by spin-orbit coupling in RTG.
A transition between spin-canted and spin-valley locked states is observed.
The enhancement is linked to changes in the spin canting angle.
Abstract
Graphene and transition metal dichalcogenide flat-band systems show similar phase diagrams, replete with magnetic and superconducting phases. An abiding question has been whether magnetic ordering competes with superconductivity or facilitates pairing. The advent of crystalline graphene superconductors enables a new generation of controlled experiments to probe the microscopic origin of superconductivity. For example, recent studies of Bernal bilayer graphene show a dramatic increase in the observed domain and critical temperature of superconducting states in the presence of enhanced spin-orbit coupling; the mechanism for this enhancement, however, remains unclear. Here, we show that introducing spin-orbit coupling in rhombohedral trilayer graphene (RTG) via substrate proximity effect generates new superconducting pockets for both electron and hole doping, with maximal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
