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The coexistence and competition of superconductivity and magnetism can lead to a variety of rich physics and technological applications. Recent discovery of atomic-layer superconductors and self-assembly of magnetic molecules on solid surfaces should allow one to create a new two-dimensional (2D) hybrid superconducting system, but its possibility has never been fully investigated so far. Here we report the fabrication of highly ordered 2D hybrid superconductors based on indium atomic layers on silicon surfaces and magnetic metal-phthalocyanines (MPc) and clarify their detailed structural, superconducting and magnetic properties. Our primary findings include a substantial controllability of the superconducting transition temperatures (Tc) through substitution of central metal ions (M = Cu, Fe, Mn) of the molecules. This is attributed to charge transfers between the magnetic molecules and the superconducting layers and to different degrees of exchange coupling between them, which originates from anisotropic distributions of the relevant d-orbitals. The present study opens a route for designing and creating exotic 2D superconductors with an atomic-scale precision.
Collective modes in two dimensional topological superconductors are studied by an extended random phase approximation theory while considering the influence of vector field of light. In two situations, the s-wave superconductors without spin-orbit-co
We present a theory of magnetic response in a finite-size two-dimensional superconductors with Rashba spin-orbit coupling. The interplay between the latter and an in-plane Zeeman field leads on the one hand to an out-of-plane spin polarization which
Electron tunneling between superconductors and normal metals has been used for an efficient refrigeration of electrons in the latter. Such cooling is a non-linear effect and usually requires a large voltage. Here we study the electron cooling in hete
Recent discovery of Ising superconductivity protected against in-plane magnetic field by spin-orbit coupling (SOC) has stimulated intensive research interests. The effect, however, was only expected to appear in two-dimensional (2D) noncentrosymmetri
We study the effect of strong spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on bound states induced by impurities in superconductors. The presence of spin-orbit coupling breaks the $mathbb{SU}(2)$-spin symmetry and causes the superconducting order parameter to have gene