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1.
Science ; 374(6573): 1381-1385, 2021 Dec 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34709939

ABSTRACT

A sufficiently large supercurrent can close the energy gap in a superconductor and create gapless quasiparticles through the Doppler shift of quasiparticle energy caused by finite Cooper pair momentum. In this gapless superconducting state, zero-energy quasiparticles reside on a segment of the normal-state Fermi surface, whereas the remaining Fermi surface is still gapped. We use quasiparticle interference to image the field-controlled Fermi surface of bismuth telluride (Bi2Te3) thin films under proximity effect from the superconductor niobium diselenide (NbSe2). A small applied in-plane magnetic field induces a screening supercurrent, which leads to finite-momentum pairing on the topological surface states of Bi2Te3. We identify distinct interference patterns that indicate a gapless superconducting state with a segmented Fermi surface. Our results reveal the strong impact of finite Cooper pair momentum on the quasiparticle spectrum.

2.
ACS Nano ; 14(2): 2366-2372, 2020 Feb 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32003558

ABSTRACT

A two-dimensional topological insulator features (only) one bulk gap with nontrivial topology, which protects one-dimensional boundary states at the Fermi level. We find a quantum phase of matter beyond this category: a multiple topological insulator. It possesses a ladder of topological gaps; each gap protects a robust edge state. We prove a monolayer of van der Waals material PtBi2 as a two-dimensional multiple topological insulator. By means of scanning tunneling spectroscopy, we directly visualize the one-dimensional hot electron (and hole) channels with nanometer size on the samples. Furthermore, we confirm the topological protection of these channels by directly demonstrating their robustness to variations of crystal orientation, edge geometry, and sample temperature. The discovered topological hot electron materials may be applied as efficient photocatalysts in the future.

3.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 4153, 2018 10 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30297777

ABSTRACT

Non-symmorphic crystals are generating great interest as they are commonly found in quantum materials, like iron-based superconductors, heavy-fermion compounds, and topological semimetals. A new type of surface state, a floating band, was recently discovered in the nodal-line semimetal ZrSiSe, but also exists in many non-symmorphic crystals. Little is known about its physical properties. Here, we employ scanning tunneling microscopy to measure the quasiparticle interference of the floating band state on ZrSiSe (001) surface and discover rotational symmetry breaking interference, healing effect and half-missing-type anomalous Umklapp scattering. Using simulation and theoretical analysis we establish that the phenomena are characteristic properties of a floating band surface state. Moreover, we uncover that the half-missing Umklapp process is derived from the glide mirror symmetry, thus identify a non-symmorphic effect on quasiparticle interferences. Our results may pave a way towards potential new applications of nanoelectronics.

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