4.6 Article

Enhancement of superconductivity and its relation to lattice expansion in InxTe (0.84≤x≤1)

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 106, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.106.134519

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [24224009, 17H02770]
  2. JST [JP16H00924]
  3. PRESTO [JPMJPR15N5]

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This study investigates the changes in the superconducting temperature in InxTe by fine-tuning the stoichiometry of indium. The results show that increasing the indium content leads to an enhancement in the superconducting temperature and the electron-phonon coupling constant. First-principles calculations reveal that this behavior is driven by two factors, with different factors dominating depending on the indium content.
The quest to govern the driving forces behind superconductivity and gain control over the superconducting transition temperature T-c is as old as the phenomenon itself. Microscopically, this requires a proper understanding of the evolution of electron-lattice interactions in their parameter space. We report such a controlled study on T-c in InxTe via fine-tuning the In stoichiometry x. We find that increasing x from 0.84 to 1 results in an enhancement of T-c from 1.3 K to 3.5 K accompanied by an increase of the electron-phonon coupling constant from 0.45 to 0.63. Employing first-principles calculations, we show that this behavior is driven by two factors, each taking the dominant role depending on x. For x less than or similar to 0.92, the major role is played by the density of electronic states at the Fermi level. Above x similar to 0.92, the change in the density of states flattens while the enhancement of T-c continues. We attribute this to a systematic softening of lattice vibrations, amplifying the electron-phonon coupling, and hence, T-c.

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