Superconductivity in a Layered Cobalt Oxychalcogenide Na 2 CoSe 2 O with a Triangular Lattice

Unconventional superconductivity in bulk materials under ambient pressure is extremely rare among the 3d transition metal compounds outside the layered cuprates and iron-based family. It is predominantly linked to highly anisotropic electronic properties and quasi-two-dimensional (2D) Fermi surfaces...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2024-03, Vol.146 (9), p.5908-5915
Hauptverfasser: Cheng, Jingwen, Bai, Jianli, Ruan, Binbin, Liu, Pinyu, Huang, Yu, Dong, Qingxin, Huang, Yifei, Sun, Yingrui, Li, Cundong, Zhang, Libo, Liu, Qiaoyu, Zhu, Wenliang, Ren, Zhian, Chen, Genfu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Unconventional superconductivity in bulk materials under ambient pressure is extremely rare among the 3d transition metal compounds outside the layered cuprates and iron-based family. It is predominantly linked to highly anisotropic electronic properties and quasi-two-dimensional (2D) Fermi surfaces. To date, the only known example of a Co-based exotic superconductor is the hydrated layered cobaltate, Na CoO · H O, and its superconductivity is realized in the vicinity of a spin-1/2 Mott state. However, the nature of the superconductivity in these materials is still a subject of intense debate, and therefore, finding a new class of superconductors will help unravel the mysteries of their unconventional superconductivity. Here, we report the discovery of superconductivity at ∼6.3 K in our newly synthesized layered compound Na CoSe O, in which the edge-shared CoSe octahedra form [CoSe ] layers with a perfect triangular lattice of Co ions. It is the first 3d transition metal oxychalcogenide superconductor with distinct structural and chemical characteristics. Despite its relatively low , this material exhibits very high superconducting upper critical fields, μ (0), which far exceeds the Pauli paramagnetic limit by a factor of 3-4. First-principles calculations show that Na CoSe O is a rare example of a negative charge transfer superconductor. This cobalt oxychalcogenide with a geometrical frustration among Co spins shows great potential as a highly appealing candidate for the realization of unconventional and/or high- superconductivity beyond the well-established Cu- and Fe-based superconductor families and opens a new field in the physics and chemistry of low-dimensional superconductors.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.3c11968