Gated tuned superconductivity and phonon softening in monolayer and bilayer MoS 2

2017 
Superconductors at the atomic two-dimensional limit are the focus of an enduring fascination in the condensed matter community. This is because, with reduced dimensions, the effects of disorders, fluctuations, and correlations in superconductors become particularly prominent at the atomic two-dimensional limit; thus such superconductors provide opportunities to tackle tough theoretical and experimental challenges. Here, based on the observation of ultrathin two-dimensional superconductivity in monolayer and bilayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) with electric-double-layer gating, we found that the critical sheet carrier density required to achieve superconductivity in a monolayer MoS2 flake can be as low as 0.55 × 1014 cm−2, which is much lower than those values in the bilayer and thicker cases in previous report and also our own observations. Further comparison of the phonon dispersion obtained by ab initio calculations indicated that the phonon softening of the acoustic modes around the M point plays a key role in the gate-induced superconductivity within the Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer theory framework. This result might help enrich the understanding of two-dimensional superconductivity with electric-double-layer gating. Experiments show that a softening of phonon modes aids gate-induced superconductivity in two-dimensional materials. As a material’s dimensions are reduced, the role of disorder and electronic correlations in defining the electronic properties become more prominent, and as the density of charge carriers is much lower, superconductivity is less likely to emerge. An international team of researchers led by Feng Mio and Baigeng Wang from Nanjing University and Harold Hwang from SLAC National Accelerator laboratory and Stanford University use an ionic liquid-based setup, which allows for high gate voltages to be applied, to demonstrate gate-induced superconductivity in monolayers and bilayers of a transition metal dichalcogenide. They show that a softening of the acoustic phonon modes allows for superconductivity to be realized in single layers with a lower carrier density than that needed in multilayers.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    42
    References
    31
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []