Interface-induced superconductivity in magnetic topological insulators
/ Authors
H. Yi, Yi-Fan Zhao, Ying-Ting Chan, Jiaqi Cai, Ruobing Mei, Xianxin Wu, Zijun Yan, Lingjie Zhou, Ruoxi Zhang, Zihao Wang
and 17 more authors
Stephen Paolini, Run Xiao, Ke Wang, A. Richardella, John Singleton, Laurel E. Winter, T. Prokscha, Z. Salman, Andreas Suter, P. Balakrishnan, A. Grutter, Moses H. W. Chan, N. Samarth, Xiaodong Xu, Weida Wu, Chaozhi Liu, Cui-Zu Chang
/ Abstract
The interface between two different materials can show unexpected quantum phenomena. In this study, we used molecular beam epitaxy to synthesize heterostructures formed by stacking together two magnetic materials, a ferromagnetic topological insulator (TI) and an antiferromagnetic iron chalcogenide (FeTe). We observed emergent interface-induced superconductivity in these heterostructures and demonstrated the co-occurrence of superconductivity, ferromagnetism, and topological band structure in the magnetic TI layer—the three essential ingredients of chiral topological superconductivity (TSC). The unusual coexistence of ferromagnetism and superconductivity is accompanied by a high upper critical magnetic field that exceeds the Pauli paramagnetic limit for conventional superconductors at low temperatures. These magnetic TI/FeTe heterostructures with robust superconductivity and atomically sharp interfaces provide an ideal wafer-scale platform for the exploration of chiral TSC and Majorana physics. Editor’s summary One of the recipes for realizing topological superconductivity calls for interfacing a topological insulator with a superconductor. In a variant of that approach, Yi et al. grew a heterostructure consisting of layers of a magnetic topological insulator, (Bi,Sb)2Te3 doped with chromium, and antiferromagnetic iron telluride. Neither of these materials is superconducting, but iron telluride is a parent compound for a family of iron-based superconductors. Interfacing the layers led to the appearance of superconductivity in the presence of ferromagnetism and topological band structure. This combination of properties makes the heterostructure a promising, although not yet proven, platform for observing chiral topological superconductivity. —Jelena Stajic Superconductivity was induced by interfacing a magnetic topological insulator with antiferromagnetic iron telluride.
Journal: Science