Electron Pairing Without Superconductivity
ORAL
Abstract
Strontium titanate (SrTiO$_3$) exhibits an extremely low carrier density threshold for superconductivity, and possesses a phase diagram similar to high-temperature superconductors—two factors that suggest an unconventional pairing mechanism. We describe transport experiments with nanowire-based quantum dots localized at the interface between SrTiO$_3$ and LaAlO$_3$. Electrostatic gating of the quantum dot reveals a series of two-electron conductance resonances--paired electron states--that bifurcate above a critical magnetic field B$_p$~1-4 Tesla, an order of magnitude larger than the superconducting critical magnetic field. For B$<$B$_p$, these resonances are insensitive to applied magnetic fields; for B$>$B$_p$, the resonances exhibit a linear Zeeman-like energy splitting. Electron pairing is stable at temperatures as high as $T=900$ mK, far above the superconducting transition temperature (T$_c$~300 mK). These experiments demonstrate the existence of a robust electronic phase in which electrons pair without forming a superconducting state. Key experimental signatures are captured by an attractive-U Hubbard model that describes real-space electron pairing as a precursor to superconductivity.
–
Authors
-
Jeremy Levy
University of Pittsburgh
-
G. Cheng
University of Pittsburgh
-
M. Tomczyk
Univ of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh
-
S. Lu
University of Pittsburgh
-
J.P. Veazey
Grand Valley State University
-
Mengchen Huang
University of Pittsburgh, Univ of Pittsburgh
-
Patrick Irvin
University of Pittsburgh, Univ of Pittsburgh
-
Sangwoo Ryu
University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Univ of Wisconsin-Madison
-
Hyungwoo Lee
University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Univ of Wisconsin-Madison
-
Chang-Beom Eom
Dept of MatSci and Engr, Univ of Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Univ of Wisconsin-Madison
-
C.S. Hellberg
Naval Research Laboratory