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Mapping Local Superfluid Density on Inhomogeneous Superconductor

ORAL

Abstract

Two-dimensional material heterostructures offer the ability to manipulate superconductivity via tunable parameters including carrier density, strain, and interlayer coupling. However, the reduced dimensionality of these systems, their small sample volumes, and the need for local probes present significant challenges in understanding how superconductivity can be modified through heterostructure design. Previously, magnetic force microscopy (MFM) has been used to measure the local magnetic penetration depth, 𝜆 [1]. In this work, we extend this technique to study thin and inhomogeneous superconductors. By combining MFM measurements with modeling of Meissner screening currents, we spatially map out 𝜆 and demonstrate how this technique can be applied to measure local modifications of superfluid density enabled by heterostructure engineering.

[1] L. Luan, O. M. Auslaender, T. M. Lippman, C. W. Hicks, B. Kalisky, J.-H. Chu, J. G. Analytis, I. R. Fisher, J. R. Kirtley, and K. A. Moler, Phys. Rev. B 81, 100501 (2010).

Presenters

  • Jikai Xu

    Columbia University

Authors

  • Jikai Xu

    Columbia University

  • Itai Keren

    Columbia University

  • Tatiana Alexandra Webb

    Columbia University

  • Shuai Zhang

    Columbia University

  • Dihao Sun

    Columbia University

  • Kazuya Miyagawa

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Kazushi Kanoda

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Angel Rubio

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter; Flatiron Institute's Center for Computational Quantum Physics (CCQ) & Initiative for Computational Catalysis (ICC)

  • Andrea Cavalleri

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter

  • Rohit P Prasankumar

    Intellectual Ventures Management, LLC

  • Stuart Wolf

    Intellectual Ventures Management, LLC

  • Abhay Pasupathy

    Columbia University, Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)

  • Dmitri N Basov

    Columbia University