Author
Listed:
- A. Devarakonda
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Columbia University)
- A. Chen
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- S. Fang
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- D. Graf
(National High Magnetic Field Laboratory)
- M. Kriener
(RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science (CEMS))
- A. J. Akey
(Harvard University)
- D. C. Bell
(Harvard University
Harvard University)
- T. Suzuki
(Toho University)
- J. G. Checkelsky
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Abstract
The electronic properties of crystals can be manipulated by superimposing spatially periodic electric, magnetic or structural modulations. Long-wavelength modulations incommensurate with the atomic lattice are particularly interesting1, exemplified by recent advances in two-dimensional (2D) moiré materials2,3. Bulk van der Waals (vdW) superlattices4–8 hosting 2D interfaces between minimally disordered layers represent scalable bulk analogues of artificial vdW heterostructures and present a complementary venue to explore incommensurately modulated 2D states. Here we report the bulk vdW superlattice SrTa2S5 realizing an incommensurate one-dimensional (1D) structural modulation of 2D transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) H-TaS2 layers. High-quality electronic transport in the H-TaS2 layers, evidenced by quantum oscillations, is made anisotropic by the modulation and exhibits commensurability oscillations paralleling lithographically modulated 2D systems9–11. We also find unconventional, clean-limit superconductivity in SrTa2S5 with a pronounced suppression of interlayer relative to intralayer coherence. The in-plane magnetic field dependence of interlayer critical current, together with electron diffraction from the structural modulation, suggests superconductivity12–14 in SrTa2S5 is spatially modulated and mismatched between adjacent TMD layers. With phenomenology suggestive of pair-density wave superconductivity15–17, SrTa2S5 may present a pathway for microscopic evaluation of this unconventional order18–21. More broadly, SrTa2S5 establishes bulk vdW superlattices as versatile platforms to address long-standing predictions surrounding modulated electronic phases in the form of nanoscale vdW devices12,13 to macroscopic crystals22,23.
Suggested Citation
A. Devarakonda & A. Chen & S. Fang & D. Graf & M. Kriener & A. J. Akey & D. C. Bell & T. Suzuki & J. G. Checkelsky, 2024.
"Evidence of striped electronic phases in a structurally modulated superlattice,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 631(8021), pages 526-530, July.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:631:y:2024:i:8021:d:10.1038_s41586-024-07589-5
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07589-5
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