Superconductivity of topological surface states in bulk insulating Bi<sub>2</sub>Te<sub>3</sub> films on niobium
ORAL
Abstract
Topological insulators (TI) coupled to s‑wave superconductors (SC) can theoretically host topological superconducting states with emergent Majorana zero modes. However, prior works of TI/SC have overlooked TI with a thickness‑mediated transition between bulk conducting and insulating phases, which can impact the quantum‑mechanical coupling between surface and bulk states responsible for long‑range proximity effects. Employing a unique cleavage‑based “flip‑chip” method, we report the preparation of topological Bi2Te3 films with predetermined thicknesses (3–7 quintuple layers) on the elemental superconductor Nb. Synchrotron band mappings of Bi2Te3/Nb reveal an unexpected dimensionality‑mediated crossover from a bulk conducting to bulk insulating system with increasing Bi2Te3 thickness. Proximity‑induced gaps are quantified as a function of Bi2Te3 thickness using ultralow‑temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy, and the results are compared with our prior findings on degenerately n‑doped Bi2Se3/Nb, degenerately p‑doped Sb2Te3/Nb, and bulk insulating (Bi1−xSbx)2Te3/Nb. Our study completes the picture for superconducting proximity effects in TI/Nb while offering methods for realizing accessible pairing needed in topological qubits.
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Presenters
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Joseph A Hlevyack
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign