Pressure-driven dome-shaped superconductivity and electronic structural evolution in tungsten ditelluride

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Abstract

Tungsten ditelluride has attracted intense research interest due to the recent discovery of its large unsaturated magnetoresistance up to 60T. Motivated by the presence of a small, sensitive Fermi surface of 5d electronic orbitals, we boost the electronic properties by applying a high pressure, and introduce superconductivity successfully. Superconductivity sharply appears at a pressure of 2.5GPa, rapidly reaching a maximum critical temperature (T c) of 7K at around 16.8GPa, followed by a monotonic decrease in T c with increasing pressure, thereby exhibiting the typical dome-shaped superconducting phase. From theoretical calculations, we interpret the low-pressure region of the superconducting dome to an enrichment of the density of states at the Fermi level and attribute the high-pressure decrease in T c to possible structural instability. Thus, tungsten ditelluride may provide a new platform for our understanding of superconductivity phenomena in transition metal dichalcogenides.

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Pan, X. C., Chen, X., Liu, H., Feng, Y., Wei, Z., Zhou, Y., … Zhang, Y. (2015). Pressure-driven dome-shaped superconductivity and electronic structural evolution in tungsten ditelluride. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8805

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