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Proximity-Effect-Induced Anisotropic Superconductivity in a Monolayer Ni-Pb Binary Alloy.

Yen-Hui LinChia-Hsiu HsuIksu JangChia-Ju ChenPok-Man ChiuDeng-Sung LinChien-Te WuFeng-Chuan ChuangPo-Yao ChangPin-Jui Hsu
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
A proximity effect facilitates the penetration of Cooper pairs that permits superconductivity in a normal metal, offering a promising approach to turn heterogeneous materials into superconductors and develop exceptional quantum phenomena. Here, we have systematically investigated proximity-induced anisotropic superconductivity in a monolayer Ni-Pb binary alloy by combining scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/STS) with theoretical calculations. By means of high-temperature growth, the ( 3 3 × 3 3 ) R 30 o Ni-Pb surface alloy has been fabricated on Pb(111) and the appearance of a domain boundary as well as a structural phase transition can be deduced from a half-unit-cell lattice displacement. Given the high spatial and energy resolution, tunneling conductance (d I /d U ) spectra have resolved the reduced but anisotropic superconducting gap Δ NiPb ≈ 1.0 meV, in stark contrast to the isotropic Δ Pb ≈ 1.3 meV. In addition, the higher density of states at the Fermi energy ( D ( E F )) of the Ni-Pb surface alloy results in an enhancement of coherence peak height. According to the same T c ≈ 7.1 K with Pb(111) from the temperature-dependent Δ NiPb and the short decay length L d ≈ 3.55 nm from the spatially monotonic decrease of Δ NiPb , both results are supportive of a proximity-induced superconductivity. Despite a lack of a bulk counterpart, the atomically thick Ni-Pb bimetallic compound opens a pathway to engineer superconducting properties down to the two-dimensional limit, giving rise to the emergence of anisotropic superconductivity via a proximity effect.
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