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Surface Superconductivity with High Transition Temperatures in Layered Ca n B n +1 C n +1 Films.

Liangliang LiuXiaohan LiuPeng SongLiying ZhangXiaowei HuangWeifeng ZhangZhen-Yu ZhangYu Jia
Published in: Nano letters (2023)
Proposed by Ginzberg nearly 60 years ago, surface superconductivity refers to the emergent phenomenon that the electrons on or near the surface of a material becomes superconducting despite its bulk is nonsuperconducting. Here, based on first-principles calculations within density functional theory, we predict that the superconducting transition temperature T c at the surfaces of Ca n B n +1 C n +1 ( n = 1, 2, 3, ...) films can be drastically enhanced to ∼90 K from 8 K for bulk CaBC. Our detailed analyses reveal that structural symmetry reduction at surfaces induces pronounced carrier self-doping into the surface B-C layer of the films and shifts the σ-bonding states toward the Fermi level; furthermore, the in-plane stretching modes of the surface layers experience significant softening. These two effects work collaboratively to strongly enhance the electron-phonon coupling, which in turn results in much higher T c values than the McMillian limit. These findings point to new material platforms for realizing unusually high- T c surface superconductivity.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • room temperature
  • molecular dynamics
  • gene expression
  • sensitive detection
  • quantum dots