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Manipulating the superconducting states of high-T_c cuprate superconductors in an efficient and reliable way is of great importance for their applications in next-generation electronics. Traditional methods are mostly based on a trial-and-error method that is difficult to implement and time consuming. Here, employing ionic liquid gating, a selective control of volatile and non-volatile superconductivity is achieved in pristine insulating Pr_2CuO_{4pmdelta} film, based on two distinct mechanisms: 1) with positive electric fields, the film can be reversibly switched between non-superconducting and superconducting states, attributed to the carrier doping effect. 2) The film becomes more resistive by applying negative bias voltage up to -4 V, but strikingly, a non-volatile superconductivity is achieved once the gate voltage is removed. Such a persistent superconducting state represents a novel phenomenon in copper oxides, resulting from the doping healing of oxygen vacancies in copper-oxygen planes as unraveled by high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscope and in-situ x-ray diffraction experiments. The effective manipulation and mastering of volatile/non-volatile superconductivity in the same parent cuprate opens the door to more functionalities for superconducting electronics, as well as supplies flexible samples for investigating the nature of quantum phase transitions in high-T_c superconductors.
We report protonation in several compounds by an ionic-liquid-gating method, with optimized gating conditions. This leads to single superconducting phases for several compounds. Non-volatility of protons allow post-gating magnetization and transport
The associations between emergent physical phenomena (e.g., superconductivity) and orbital, charge, and spin degrees of freedom of $3d$ electrons are intriguing in transition metal compounds. Here, we successfully manipulate the superconductivity of
Since the discovery of n-type copper oxide superconductors, the evolution of electron- and hole-bands and its relation to the superconductivity have been seen as a key factor in unveiling the mechanism of high-Tc superconductors. So far, the occurren
The mechanism of superconductivity in cuprates remains one of the big challenges of condensed matter physics.High Tc cuprates crystallize into layered perovskite structure featuring copper oxygen octahedral coordination. Due to the Jahn Teller effect
Ionic liquid gating can markedly modulate the materials carrier density so as to induce metallization, superconductivity, and quantum phase transitions. One of the main issues is whether the mechanism of ionic liquid gating is an electrostatic field