Pressure-induced superconductivity in a three-dimensional topological material ZrTe5
/ Authors
Yonghui Zhou, Juefei Wu, W. Ning, Nana Li, Yongping Du, Xuliang Chen, Ranran Zhang, Z. Chi, Xuefei Wang, Xiangde Zhu
and 9 more authors
P. Lu, Cheng Ji, X. Wan, Zhaorong Yang, Jian Sun, Wenge Yang, M. Tian, Yuheng Zhang, H. Mao
/ Abstract
Significance Three-dimensional (3D) Dirac semimetals have attracted a lot of advanced research recently on many exotic properties and their association with crystalline and electronic structures under extreme conditions. As one of the fundamental state parameters, high pressure is an effective, clean way to tune lattice as well as electronic states, especially in quantum states, thus their electronic and magnetic properties. In this paper, by combining multiple experimental probes (synchrotron X-ray diffraction, low-temperature transport under magnetic field) and theoretical investigations, we discover the pressure-induced 3D Dirac semimetal to superconductor transition in ZrTe5. As a new type of topological materials, ZrTe5 shows many exotic properties under extreme conditions. Using resistance and ac magnetic susceptibility measurements under high pressure, while the resistance anomaly near 128 K is completely suppressed at 6.2 GPa, a fully superconducting transition emerges. The superconducting transition temperature Tc increases with applied pressure, and reaches a maximum of 4.0 K at 14.6 GPa, followed by a slight drop but remaining almost constant value up to 68.5 GPa. At pressures above 21.2 GPa, a second superconducting phase with the maximum Tc of about 6.0 K appears and coexists with the original one to the maximum pressure studied in this work. In situ high-pressure synchrotron X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy combined with theoretical calculations indicate the observed two-stage superconducting behavior is correlated to the structural phase transition from ambient Cmcm phase to high-pressure C2/m phase around 6 GPa, and to a mixture of two high-pressure phases of C2/m and P-1 above 20 GPa. The combination of structure, transport measurement, and theoretical calculations enable a complete understanding of the emerging exotic properties in 3D topological materials under extreme environments.
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences