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Superconductor-Insulator Transition Induced by Electrostatic Charging in High Temperature Superconductors

Posted on:2012-10-05Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of MinnesotaCandidate:Leng, XiangFull Text:PDF
GTID:1451390008495550Subject:Physics
Abstract/Summary:
Ultrathin YBa2Cu3O7-x films were grown on SrTiO3 substrates in a high pressure oxygen sputtering system to study the superconductor-insulator transition by electrostatic charging. While backside gating using SrTiO3 as a dielectric induces only small TC shifts, a clear transition between superconducting and insulating behavior was realized in a 7 unit cell thick film using an ionic liquid as the dielectric. Employing a finite size scaling analysis, curves of resistance versus temperature, R(T), over the temperature range from 6 K to 22 K were found to collapse onto a single function, which suggests the presence of a quantum critical point. However the scaling failed at the lowest temperatures indicating the possible presence of an additional phase between the superconducting and insulating regimes. In the presence of magnetic field, a cleaner superconductor-insulator transition was realized by electrostatic charging. A scaling analysis showed that this was a quantum phase transition. The magnetic field did not change the universality class. Further depletion of holes caused electrons to be accumulated in the film and the superconductivity to be recovered. This could be an n-type superconductor. The carriers were found to be highly localized.;By changing the polarity of the gate voltage, an underdoped 7 unit cell thick film was tuned into the overdoped regime. This process proved to be reversible. Transport measurements showed a series of anomalous features compared to chemically doped bulk samples and an unexpected two-step mechanism for electrostatic doping was revealed. These anomalous behaviors suggest that there is an electronic phase transition in the Fermi surface around the optimal doping level.
Keywords/Search Tags:Transition, Electrostatic charging, Temperature
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