Dimensionality-Driven Anomalous Metallic State with Zero-field Nonreciprocal Transport in Layered Ising Superconductors
Yanwei Cui, Zenglin Liu, Qin Liu, Junlin Xiong, Yongqin Xie, Yudi Dai, Ji Zhou, Lizheng Wang, Hanyan Fang, Haiwen Liu, Shi-Jun Liang, Bin Cheng, and Feng Miao

TL;DR
This study uncovers a zero-field anomalous metallic state with nonreciprocal transport in ultra-thin layered TMD superconductors, revealing how reduced dimensionality induces exotic quantum phenomena and spontaneous symmetry breaking.
Contribution
It demonstrates the emergence of a zero-field AMS in layered TMD superconductors as thickness decreases, linking dimensionality to quantum critical phases and nonreciprocal transport behaviors.
Findings
Zero-field AMS appears at 3 nm thickness.
AMS exhibits non-reciprocal transport and vortex creep behavior.
Spontaneous time-reversal symmetry breaking is observed.
Abstract
The anomalous metal state (AMS), observed in failed superconductors, provides insights into superconductivity and quantum criticality, with studies revealing unconventional quantum phases like the Bose metal. Recently, layered transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) superconductors approaching the two-dimensional limit have garnered significant attention for the enhanced phase fluctuations and electronic correlations. Investigating AMS in these systems, particularly in the absence of an external magnetic field, could offer valuable insights into the dimensionality-driven emergence of exotic quantum phenomena, including triplet Cooper pairing, phase fluctuation dynamics, and especially the recently discovered field-free superconducting diode effects. However, the field-free AMS has yet to be observed in TMD superconductors. Here, we report the dimensionality-tunable AMS near the…
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Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Iron-based superconductors research · Topological Materials and Phenomena
