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Here we report the observation of superconductivity in pressurized type-II Weyl semimetal (WSM) candidate TaIrTe4 by means of complementary high-pressure transport and synchrotron X-ray diffraction measurements. We find that TaIrTe4 shows superconductivity with transition temperature (TC) of 0.57 K at the pressure of ~23.8 GPa. Then, the TC value increases with pressure and reaches ~2.1 K at 65.7 GPa. In situ high-pressure Hall coefficient (RH) measurements at low temperatures demonstrate that the positive RH increases with pressure until the critical pressure of the superconducting transition is reached, but starts to decrease upon further increasing pressure. Above the critical pressure, the positive magnetoresistance effect disappears simultaneously. Our high pressure X-ray diffraction measurements reveal that, at around the critical pressure the lattice of the TaIrTe4 sample is distorted by the application of pressure and its volume is reduced by ~19.2%, the value of which is predicted to result in the change of the electronic structure significantly. We propose that the pressure-induced distortion in TaIrTe4 is responsible for the change of topology of Fermi surface and such a change favors the emergence of superconductivity. Our results clearly demonstrate the correlation among the lattice distortion, topological physics and superconductivity in the WSM.
The search for unconventional superconductivity in Weyl semimetal materials is currently an exciting pursuit, since such superconducting phases could potentially be topologically nontrivial and host exotic Majorana modes. The layered material TaIrTe4
Two-dimensional (2D) transition-metal dichalcogenide (TMDs) MoTe2 has attracted much attention due to its predicted Weyl semimetal (WSM) state and a quantum spin Hall insulator in bulk and monolayer form, respectively. We find that the superconductiv
Here we report the observation of pressure-induced superconductivity in type-II Weyl semimetal (WSM) candidate NbIrTe4 and the evolution of its Hall coefficient (RH), magnetoresistance (MR), and lattice with increasing pressure to ~57 GPa. These resu
The relation between the polar structural instability and superconductivity in a Weyl semimetal candidate MoTe2 has been clarified by finely controlled physical and chemical pressure. The physical pressure as well as the chemical pressure, i.e., the
The layered ternary compound TaIrTe4 is an important candidate to host the recently predicted type-II Weyl Fermions. However, a direct and definitive proof of the absence of inversion symmetry in this material, a prerequisite for the existence of Wey