Anisotropic proximity-induced superconductivity and edge supercurrent in Kagome metal, K1-xV3Sb5

10 Dec 2020  ·  Yaojia Wang, Shuoying Yang, Pranava K. Sivakumar, Brenden R. Ortiz, Samuel M. L. Teicher, Heng Wu, Abhay K. Srivastava, Chirag Garg, Defa Liu, Stuart S. P. Parkin, Eric S. Toberer, Tyrel McQueen, Stephen D. Wilson, Mazhar N. Ali ·

Materials with transition metals in triangular lattices are of great interest for their potential combination of strong correlation, exotic magnetism and electronic topology. Kagome nets are of particular importance since the discovery of geometrically frustrated magnetism and topological band structures in crystals like Herbertsmithite and Fe3Sn2, respectively. KV3Sb5 was discovered to be a layered topological metal with a Kagome net of vanadium. Here, we fabricated Josephson Junctions (JJ) of K1-xV3Sb5 and induced superconductivity over long junction lengths. Through magnetoresistance and current vs. phase measurements, we observed magnetic field sweeping direction dependent magnetoresistance, and an anisotropic interference pattern with a Fraunhofer pattern for in-plane magnetic field, but a suppression of critical current for out-of-plane magnetic field. These results indicate an anisotropic internal magnetic field in K1-xV3Sb5 which influences the superconducting coupling in the junction, possibly giving rise to spin-triplet superconductivity. In addition, the observation of long-lived fast oscillations shows evidence of spatially localized conducting channels arising from edge states. These observations pave the way for studying unconventional superconductivity and Josephson device based on Kagome metals with electron correlation and topology.

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Superconductivity