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Thickness dependence of superconductivity in ultrathin NbS2

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

R. Yan
G. Khalsa
B.T. Schaefer
A. Jarjour
S. Rouvimov
K.C. Nowack
H.G. Xing
D. Jena

Abstract

We report a systematic study of thickness-dependent superconductivity and carrier transport properties in exfoliated layered 2H-NbS2. Hall-effect measurements reveal 2H-NbS2 is a p-type metal with hole mobility of 1-3 cm2 V-1s-1. The superconducting transition temperature is found to decrease with thickness. However, we find that superconductivity is suppressed due to disorder resulting from the incorporation of atmospheric oxygen. Cross-section transmission electron microscope imaging reveals a chemical change of NbS2 in the ambient, resulting in the formation of amorphous oxide layers sandwiching crystalline layered NbS2. Though few-nm-thick 2H-NbS2 completely converts to amorphous oxide in the ambient, PMMA encapsulation prevents further chemical change and preserves superconductivity in thicker samples. © 2019 The Japan Society of Applied Physics.

Date Published

Journal

Applied Physics Express

Volume

12

Issue

2

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85062286099&doi=10.7567%2f1882-0786%2faaff89&partnerID=40&md5=9b156b47e91b4bd5af4ec81915afdfa9

DOI

10.7567/1882-0786/aaff89

Group (Lab)

Katja Nowack Group

Funding Source

DMR-1719875
1433490
1542081

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