ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Unconventional superconductivity and in particular triplet superconductivity have been front and center of topological materials and quantum technology research. Here we report our observation of triplet superconductivity in nonmagnetic CoSi$_2$/TiSi$_2$ heterostructures on silicon. CoSi$_2$ undergoes a sharp superconducting transition at a critical temperature $T_c approx$ 1.5 K, while TiSi$_2$ is a normal metal. We investigate conductance spectra of both two-terminal CoSi$_2$/TiSi$_2$ tunnel junctions and three-terminal T-shaped CoSi$_2$/TiSi$_2$ superconducting proximity structures. We report an unexpectedly large spin-orbit coupling in CoSi$_2$ heterostructures. Below $T_c$, we observe (1) a narrow zero-bias conductance peak on top of a broad hump, accompanied by two symmetric side dips in the tunnel junctions, (2) a narrow zero-bias conductance peak in T-shaped structures, and (3) hysteresis in the junction magnetoresistance. These three independent and complementary observations are indicative of chiral $p$-wave pairing in CoSi$_2$/TiSi$_2$ heterostructures. This chiral triplet superconductivity and the excellent fabrication compatibility of CoSi$_2$ and TiSi$_2$ with present-day silicon integrated-circuit technology facilitate full scalability for potential use in quantum-computing devices.
Coupling between $sigma$-bonding electrons and phonons is generally very strong. To metallize $sigma$-electrons provides a promising route to hunt for new high-T$_c$ superconductors. Based on this picture and first-principles density functional calcu
Using van der Waals tunnel junctions, we perform spectroscopy of superconducting $mathrm{NbSe_2}$ flakes, of thicknesses ranging from 2--25 monolayers, measuring the quasiparticle density of states as a function of applied in-plane magnetic field up
Interlayer excitons (IXs) possess a much longer lifetime than intralayer excitons due to the spatial separation of the electrons and holes; hence, they have been pursued to create exciton condensates for decades. The recent emergence of two-dimension
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on the $^{195}$Pt nucleus in an aligned powder of the moderately heavy-fermion material U2PtC2 are consistent with spin-triplet pairing in its superconducting state. Across the superconducting transition
Despite growing interest in them, highly crystalline two-dimensional superconductors derived from exfoliated layered materials are few. Employing the anisotropic Migdal-Eliashberg formalism based on {it ab initio} calculations, we find monolayer NiTe