A wide-range topological thermometer with Ta2Pd3Te5: from power-law response to application prospects
/ Authors
Yupeng Li, Anqi Wang, Senyang Pan, Dayu Yan, Guang Yang, Xing-jia Guo, Yu Hong, Guangtong Liu, F. Qu, Zhijun Wang
and 5 more authors
/ Abstract
In recent decades, there has been a persistent pursuit of applications for surface/edge states in topological systems, driven by their dissipationless transport effects. This work demonstrates the remarkable properties of the topological material Ta 2 Pd 3 Te 5 , as a thermometer. At low temperatures, it shows a power-law correlation in temperature-dependent resistance, while behaving like a semiconductor at high temperatures. This dual behavior effectively mitigates the issue of infinite resistance in semiconductor thermometers at ultra-low temperatures, making it ideal for millikelvin-range refrigerators. Through chemical doping, thickness adjustment, and gate voltage control, its performance can be finely tuned, and can also enable micron-scale local temperature measurement from millikelvin to room temperature. Furthermore, this thermometer exhibits excellent temperature sensitivity and resolution, and can be fine-tuned to show small magnetoresistance. In summary, the Ta 2 Pd 3 Te 5 -based thermometer, also referred to as a topological thermometer, demonstrates considerable potential for broad-temperature-range detection and merits further investigation and optimization.
Journal: npj Quantum Materials