Gate-tunable phase transitions in thin flakes of 1T-TaS sub(2)

The ability to tune material properties using gating by electric fields is at the heart of modern electronic technology. It is also a driving force behind recent advances in two-dimensional systems, such as the observation of gate electric-field-induced superconductivity and metal-insulator transiti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature nanotechnology 2015-03, Vol.10 (3), p.270-276
Hauptverfasser: Yu, Yijun, Yang, Fangyuan, Lu, Xiu Fang, Yan, Ya Jun, Cho, Yong-Heum, Ma, Liguo, Niu, Xiaohai, Kim, Sejoong, Son, Young-Woo, Feng, Donglai, Li, Shiyan, Cheong, Sang-Wook, Chen, Xian Hui, Zhang, Yuanbo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The ability to tune material properties using gating by electric fields is at the heart of modern electronic technology. It is also a driving force behind recent advances in two-dimensional systems, such as the observation of gate electric-field-induced superconductivity and metal-insulator transitions. Here, we describe an ionic field-effect transistor (termed an iFET), in which gate-controlled Li ion intercalation modulates the material properties of layered crystals of 1T-TaS sub(2). The strong charge doping induced by the tunable ion intercalation alters the energetics of various charge-ordered states in 1T-TaS sub(2) and produces a series of phase transitions in thin-flake samples with reduced dimensionality. We find that the charge-density wave states in 1T-TaS sub(2) collapse in the two-dimensional limit at critical thicknesses. Meanwhile, at low temperatures, the ionic gating induces multiple phase transitions from Mott-insulator to metal in 1T-TaS sub(2) thin flakes, with five orders of magnitude modulation in resistance, and superconductivity emerges in a textured charge-density wave state induced by ionic gating. Our method of gate-controlled intercalation opens up possibilities in searching for novel states of matter in the extreme charge-carrier-concentration limit.
ISSN:1748-3387
DOI:10.1038/nnano.2014.323