Quasiparticle recombination in the unconventional superconductor T$_d$-MoTe$_2$
ORAL
Abstract
Quasiparticle relaxation and recombination in superconductors can not only elucidate the pairing mechanisms but also set performance limits on superconducting devices, such as kinetic inductance detectors and parametric amplifiers. However, limited probes exist to study quasiparticle dynamics in microscopic samples of atomically thin van der Waals (vdW) materials, which often exhibit superconductivity coexisting with other exotic phases of matter. To this end, we present a novel pump-probe technique to measure the quasiparticle recombination rate in T$_d$-MoTe$_2$, a vdW Weyl semimetal that hosts topological states and unconventional superconductivity. We demonstrate how we use superconducting microwave resonators to break Cooper pairs in micron-scale samples and excite quasiparticles right above the superconducting gap edge. We use this technique to probe quasiparticle dynamics and show time-domain measurements of quasiparticle recombination in T$_d$-MoTe$_2$ as a function of temperature and microwave power. Our results show promise for this technique as a powerful tool to understand the nature of pairing in unconventional superconductors.
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Presenters
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Theodore Chung
Columbia University
Authors
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Theodore Chung
Columbia University
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Mary Kreidel
Harvard University
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Jesse Balgley
Columbia University
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Xuanjing Chu
Columbia University
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Julian Ingham
Columbia University
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Nishchhal Verma
Columbia University
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Raquel Queiroz
Columbia University
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Robert M Westervelt
Harvard University
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James C Hone
Columbia University
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Kin Chung Fong
Raytheon BBN, Raytheon BBN Technologies, Northeastern University