STM spectroscopy of vortices in atomic monolayers of lead on Si(111)

Invited

Abstract


In 1964 V. L. Ginzburg predicted that new superconducting phases could appear in ultrathin films deposited on insulating surfaces. In 2010 superconductivity below 2K was discovered in some crystalline atomic monolayers of Pb grown on atomically clean Si(111) [1,2]. In crystalline monolayers of Pb on Si(111) the superconducting condensate is an intrinsic Josephson network formed by superconducting terraces coupled by Josephson links at individual atomic steps [1]. The detailed atomic arrangement at each step decides the strength of the Josephson coupling. In a magnetic field, the superconducting vortex phase contains different kinds of vortices, ranging from Abrikosov to Josephson limits. Amorphous monolayers of Pb are non-superconducting correlated metals. Playing with geometry of in-situ grown samples enables realizing lateral SNS junctions, reveal and study Josephson proximity vortices inside their N-parts [2].
When individual magnetic impurities are added, the Cooper pairs are diffused forming so-called Yu, Shiba and Rusinov (YSR) bound states. While in three-dimensional superconductors these states rapidly decay around impurities on atomic scale, superconductors with two-dimensional electronic structure such as Pb-monolayers on Si(111) or 2H-NbSe2 host YSR bound states with spatial extents orders of magnitude larger [3]. These long-range magnetic states could be used to produce new topological phases in hybrid systems such as arrays or clusters of magnetic atoms and molecules coupled through the 2D-superconducting medium.
In this talk we describe a series of recent experiments which mapped superconductivity, vortices and YSR states in Pb/Si(111) and 2H-NbSe2 by scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy at ultralow temperatures.

[1] Ch. Brun, et al. Nature Phys. 10, 444 (2014)
[2] D. Roditchev, et al. Nature Phys. 11, 332 (2015)
[3] G. Ménard, et al. Nature Phys. 11, 1013 (2015)

Presenters

  • Dimitri Roditchev

    Laboratoire de Physique et d’Etude des Matériaux (LPEM), PSL-University, CNRS &ESPCI

Authors

  • Dimitri Roditchev

    Laboratoire de Physique et d’Etude des Matériaux (LPEM), PSL-University, CNRS &ESPCI

  • Lise Serrier-Brinon

    Institut des Nanosciences de Paris (INSP), CNRS &Sorbonne University

  • Gerbold Menard

    Institut des Nanosciences de Paris (INSP), CNRS &Sorbonne University, University of Copenhagen

  • Christophe Brun

    Institut des Nanosciences de Paris (INSP), CNRS &Sorbonne University

  • Tristan Cren

    Institut des Nanosciences de Paris (INSP), CNRS &Sorbonne University

  • Stephane Pons

    Laboratoire de Physique et d’Etude des Matériaux (LPEM), PSL-University, CNRS &ESPCI, ESPCI

  • Milorad Milosevic

    Departement Fysica, Universiteit Antwerpen, Department of Physics, Universiteit of Antwerpen

  • Juan Carlos Cuevas

    Departamento de Física Teórica de la Materia Condensada, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Dept. de Física Teórica de la Materia Condensada, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid