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Why scanning tunneling spectroscopy of Sr₂RuO₄ sometimes doesn't see the superconducting gap
Physicsnpj Quantum Materials

Why scanning tunneling spectroscopy of Sr₂RuO₄ sometimes doesn't see the superconducting gap

A. Valadkhani, J. B. Profe, et al.

This groundbreaking research conducted by Adrian Valadkhani, Jonas B. Profe, Andreas Kreisel, P. J. Hirschfeld, and Roser Valentí explores how the removal of a RuO₂ surface layer is pivotal in revealing the superconducting gap in Sr₂RuO₄. Utilizing first-principles methods, the study uncovers the conditions necessary for restoring bulk-like superconductivity, presenting compelling alternatives for observable superconductivity.... show more
Abstract
Scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) are perhaps the most promising ways to detect the superconducting gap size and structure in the canonical unconventional superconductor Sr₂RuO₄ directly. However, in many cases, researchers have reported being unable to detect the gap at all in STM conductance measurements. Recently, an investigation of this issue on various local topographic structures on a Sr-terminated surface found that superconducting spectra appeared only in the region of small nanoscale canyons, corresponding to the removal of one RuO surface layer. Here, we analyze the electronic structure of various possible surface structures using first principles methods, and argue that bulk conditions favorable for superconductivity can be achieved when removal of the RuO layer suppresses the RuO₄ octahedral rotation locally. We further propose alternative terminations to the most frequently reported Sr termination where superconductivity surfaces should be observed.
Publisher
npj Quantum Materials
Published On
Oct 13, 2024
Authors
Adrian Valadkhani, Jonas B. Profe, Andreas Kreisel, P. J. Hirschfeld, Roser Valentí
Tags
superconductivitySr₂RuO₄scanning tunneling spectroscopyelectronic structureRuO₂ layer removalbulk-like superconductivity
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