Confinement-Engineered Superconductor to Correlated-Insulator Transition in a van der Waals Monolayer

Nano Lett. 2022 Mar 9;22(5):1845-1850. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c03491. Epub 2022 Feb 15.

Abstract

Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDC) are a rich family of two-dimensional materials displaying a multitude of different quantum ground states. In particular, d3 TMDCs are paradigmatic materials hosting a variety of symmetry broken states, including charge density waves, superconductivity, and magnetism. Among this family, NbSe2 is one of the best-studied superconducting materials down to the monolayer limit. Despite its superconducting nature, a variety of results point toward strong electronic repulsions in NbSe2. Here, we control the strength of the interactions experimentally via quantum confinement and use low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and spectroscopy (STS) to demonstrate that NbSe2 is in close proximity to a correlated insulating state. This reveals the coexistence of competing interactions in NbSe2, creating a transition from a superconducting to an insulating quantum correlated state by confinement-controlled interactions. Our results demonstrate the dramatic role of interactions in NbSe2, establishing NbSe2 as a correlated superconductor with competing interactions.

Keywords: correlated insulator; insulator to superconductor transition; monolayer niobium diselenide; scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy; superconductor.