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Superconductivity in the doped topological insulator Cu$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$ under high pressure

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 Added by A. de Visser
 Publication date 2011
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We report a high-pressure single crystal study of the topological superconductor Cu$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$. Resistivity measurements under pressure show superconductivity is depressed smoothly. At the same time the metallic behavior is gradually lost. The upper critical field data $B_{c2}(T)$ under pressure collapse onto a universal curve. The absence of Pauli limiting and the comparison of $B_{c2}(T)$ to a polar state function point to spin-triplet superconductivity, but an anisotropic spin-singlet state cannot be discarded completely.



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105 - M. P. Smylie , K. Willa , H. Claus 2017
We present resistivity and magnetization measurements on proton-irradiated crystals demonstrating that the superconducting state in the doped topological superconductor Nb$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$ (x = 0.25) is surprisingly robust against disorder-induced electron scattering. The superconducting transition temperature $T_c$ decreases without indication of saturation with increasing defect concentration, and the corresponding scattering rates far surpass expectations based on conventional theory. The low-temperature variation of the London penetration depth $Deltalambda(T)$ follows a power law ($Deltalambda(T)sim T^2$) indicating the presence of symmetry-protected point nodes. Our results are consistent with the proposed robust nematic $E_u$ pairing state in this material.
A state of matter with a multi-component order parameter can give rise to vestigial order. In the vestigial phase, the primary order is only partially melted, leaving a remaining symmetry breaking behind, an effect driven by strong classical or quantum fluctuations. Vestigial states due to primary spin and charge-density-wave order have been discussed in the context of iron-based and cuprate materials. Here we present the observation of a partially melted superconductor in which pairing fluctuations condense at a separate phase transition and form a nematic state with broken Z3, i.e. three-state Potts-model symmetry. High-resolution thermal expansion, specific heat and magnetization measurements of the doped topological insulator NbxBi2Se3 reveal that this symmetry breaking occurs at Tnem=3.8 K above Tc=3.25 K, along with an onset of superconducting fluctuations. Thus, before Cooper pairs establish long-range coherence at Tc, they fluctuate in a way that breaks the rotational invariance at Tnem and induces a distortion of the crystalline lattice. Similar results are found for CuxBi2Se3.
Unconventional superconductivity is characterized by the spontaneous symmetry breaking of the macroscopic superconducting wavefunction in addition to the gauge symmetry breaking, such as rotational-symmetry breaking with respect to the underlying crystal-lattice symmetry. Particularly, superconductivity with spontaneous rotational-symmetry breaking in the wavefunction amplitude and thus in bulk properties, not yet reported previously, is intriguing and can be termed nematic superconductivity in analogy to nematic liquid-crystal phases. Here, based on specific-heat measurements of the single-crystalline Cu$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$ under accurate magnetic-field-direction control, we report thermodynamic evidence for nematic superconductivity, namely, clear two-fold-symmetric behavior in a trigonal lattice. The results indicate realization of an odd-parity nematic state, feasible only by macroscopic quantum condensates and distinct from nematic states in liquid crystals. The results also confirm topologically non-trivial superconductivity in Cu$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$.
An archetypical layered topological insulator Bi$_2$Se$_3$ becomes superconductive upon doping with Sr, Nb or Cu. Superconducting properties of these materials in the presence of in-plane magnetic field demonstrate spontaneous symmetry breaking: 180$^circ$-rotation symmetry of superconductivity versus 120$^circ$-rotation symmetry of the crystal. Such behavior brilliantly confirms nematic topological superconductivity. To what extent this nematicity is due to superconducting pairing in these materials, rather than due to crystal structure distortions? This question remained unanswered, because so far no visible deviations from the 3-fold crystal symmetry were resolved in these materials. To address this question we grow high quality single crystals of Sr$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$, perform detailed X-ray diffraction and magnetotransport studies and reveal that the observed superconducting nematicity direction correlates with the direction of small structural distortions in these samples( $sim 0.02$% elongation in one crystallographic direction). Additional anisotropy comes from orientation of the crystallite axes. 2-fold symmetry of magnetoresistance observed in the most uniform crystals well above critical temperature demonstrates that these structural distortions are nevertheless strong enough. Our data in combination with strong sample-to-sample variation of the superconductive anisotropy parameter are indicative for significance of the structural factor in the apparent nematic superconductivity in Sr$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$.
Topological superconductors have attracted wide-spreading interests for the bright application perspectives to quantum computing. Cu$_{0.3}$Bi$_2$Se$_3$ is a rare bulk topological superconductor with an odd-parity wave function, but the details of the vector order parameter $textbf{{d}}$ and its pinning mechanism are still unclear. We have succeeded in growing Cu$_x$Bi$_2$Se$_3$ single crystals with unprecedented high doping levels. For samples with $x$ = 0.28, 0.36 and 0.37 with similar carrier density as evidenced by Knight shift, the in-plane upper critical field $H_{rm c2}$ shows a two-fold symmetry. However, the angle at which the $H_{rm c2}$ becomes minimal is different by 90$^circ$ among them, which indicates that the $textbf{{d}}$-vector direction is different for each crystal likely due to a different local environment. The carrier density for $x$ = 0.46 and 0.54 increases substantially compared to $xleq$ 0.37. Surprisingly, the in-plane $H_{rm c2}$ anisotropy disappears, indicating that the gap symmetry undergoes a transition from nematic to isotropic (possibly chiral) as carrier increases.
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