How to induce superconductivity in epitaxial graphene \(via\) remote proximity effect through an intercalated gold layer

Graphene holds promises for exploring exotic superconductivity with Dirac-like fermions. Making graphene a superconductor at large scales is however a long-lasting challenge. A possible solution relies on epitaxially-grown graphene, using a superconducting substrate. Such substrates are scarce, and...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2020-09
Hauptverfasser: Mazaleyrat, Estelle, Vlaic, Sergio, Artaud, Alexandre, Magaud, Laurence, Thomas, Vincent, Gómez-Herrero, Ana Cristina, Lisi, Simone, Singh, Priyank, Bendiab, Nedjma, Guisset, Valérie, Philippe, David, Pons, Stéphane, Roditchev, Dimitri, Chapelier, Claude, Coraux, Johann
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Graphene holds promises for exploring exotic superconductivity with Dirac-like fermions. Making graphene a superconductor at large scales is however a long-lasting challenge. A possible solution relies on epitaxially-grown graphene, using a superconducting substrate. Such substrates are scarce, and usually destroy the Dirac character of the electronic band structure. Using electron diffraction (reflection high-energy, and low-energy), scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and density functional theory calculations, we introduce a strategy to induce superconductivity in epitaxial graphene \(via\) a remote proximity effect, from the rhenium substrate through an intercalated gold layer. Weak graphene-Au interaction, contrasting with the strong undesired graphene-Re interaction, is demonstrated by a reduced graphene corrugation, an increased distance between graphene and the underlying metal, a linear electronic dispersion and a characteristic vibrational signature, both latter features revealing also a slight \(p\) doping of graphene. We also reveal that the main shortcoming of the intercalation approach to proximity superconductivity is the creation of a high density of point defects in graphene (10\(^{14}\)~cm\(^{-2}\)). Finally, we demonstrate remote proximity superconductivity in graphene/Au/Re(0001), at low temperature.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2009.13176