Abstract
Recently, theoretical studies show that layered HfTe5 is at the boundary of weak & strong topological insulator (TI) and might crossover to a Dirac semimetal state by changing lattice parameters. The topological properties of 3D stacked HfTe5 are expected hence to be sensitive to pressures tuning. Here, we report pressure induced phase evolution in both electronic & crystal structures for HfTe5 with a culmination of pressure induced superconductivity. Our experiments indicated that the temperature for anomaly resistance peak (Tp) due to Lifshitz transition decreases first before climbs up to a maximum with pressure while the Tp minimum corresponds to the transition from a weak TI to strong TI. The HfTe5 crystal becomes superconductive above ~5.5 GPa where the Tp reaches maximum. The highest superconducting transition temperature (Tc) around 5 K was achieved at 20 GPa. Crystal structure studies indicate that HfTe5 transforms from a Cmcm phase across a monoclinic C2/m phase then to a P-1 phase with increasing pressure. Based on transport, structure studies a comprehensive phase diagram of HfTe5 is constructed as function of pressure. The work provides valuable experimental insights into the evolution on how to proceed from a weak TI precursor across a strong TI to superconductors.
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Introduction
The topological quantum materials, such as topological insulators (TIs), Dirac and Weyl semimetals, attracted much interests recently due to their rich physics and promising prospects for application in electronic and spintronic devices1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18. There is an ongoing effort to search for new materials which might host similar electronic and topological properties. Graphene, a single sheet of carbon atoms, which hosts two-dimensional (2D) Dirac fermions, was firstly proposed to be one of the quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulators3, but it is not suitable for application due to its small energy gap. The transition-metal pentatellurides, HfTe5 or ZrTe5, long been known as thermoelectric materials, have stimulated considerable interest and active studies due to their unusual transport properties, in which the resistivity exhibits a pronounced peak at ~80 K for HfTe5 and ~130 K for ZrTe5, respectively19,20,21,22. Recent theoretical calculations predicted that the single-layer HfTe5 and ZrTe5 are QSH insulators with large energy gap. Remarkably, the topological band structures of their 3D stacked compounds could be tuned by lattice parameters23. Besides, the combined scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/S) and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) results demonstrate that the top monolayer of ZrTe5 crystals is a large-gap 2D TI24. This predication renewed the interests in exploring exotic quantum physical phenomena in experiments. Very recently, Li. et al. reported the observation of chiral anomaly in the bulk single crystal ZrTe5 through magneto-transport study25, which is similar to that observed in 3D Dirac semimetal Na3Bi18. With applying pressure, superconductivity with Tc ~ 2.5 K appears in ZrTe5 above 6 GPa26. The theoretical calculations predicate that both ZrTe5 and HfTe5 are located in the vicinity of a transition between weak and strong TI23. ARPES results of bulk ZrTe5 also suggest the possible transition from weak TI(WTI) to strong TI(STI) via pressure27. However, there are few research works on HfTe5 due to the difficulty of growing large and high quality single crystals28. Our preliminary study on HfTe5 shows very different quantum physical behaviors at ambient pressure in spite of the two compounds possess the same crystal structure28. These interesting results make HfTe5 a potential material for the study of the novel topological quantum phenomenon and topological phase transitions as function of pressures.
High pressure is a neat but powerful method29,30,31,32,33,34,35 to tune the electronic and crystal structures of emergent quantum matters with advantages of without introducing disorder or impurity that are always inherent to chemical doping. In this work, we report the discovery of pressure induced superconductivity in HfTe5 single crystals. Transport experiments indicate consecutive transitions induced by pressure from semiconductor to metal before superconductivity appears at a critical pressure of ~5.5 GPa. A systematic phase diagram on crystal and electronic properties of HfTe5 as a function of pressure is constructed.
Results and Discussion
Figure 1 shows the evolution of ac plane resistance as a function of temperature of HfTe5 single crystals at various pressures. At 1.3 GPa, the resistance displays a typical semiconductor like behavior above 40 K. As temperature continues to decrease, the resistance increases much slowly. When pressure increases up to 2.1 GPa, the resistance shows a hump near 49 K, and then decreases with temperature, accompanied by an upturn below 11 K. The behaviors of the abnormal resistance appearing at 40 K and 49 K are intimately tied to the band structure evolution with temperatures, which are similar to those observed at ambient pressure19,20,28. The temperature with peak resistance (Tp) increases to 84 K at 4.0 GPa, accompanied by the broadening of the hump and the decrease of the peak resistance. Up to 5.5 GPa, in addition to the increases of Tp to 136 K, a small drop of resistance is observed at low temperature which signifies the occurrence of superconducting.
Both HfTe5 and ZrTe5 display a resistive abnormal hump. The Tp in HfTe5 crystal decreases with pressure up to 1.7 GPa but those of ZrTe5 is on the opposite36. This results in the reduced Tp of HfTe5 under low pressure than that at ambient pressure (65 K) as seen in the insert of Fig. 1(a). Our experiment indicates that Tp changed systematically with pressure, showing the anomaly resistance peak moves to low temperature first before reverses to high temperature then followed by disappearance. That is in opposite to the effect of pressure on ZrTe526.
Due to weak interlayer coupling strength, both ZrTe5 and HfTe5 locate at the vicinity between weak and strong TI23, as confirmed by ARPES experiments on bulk ZrTe527. The identification of a temperature induced Lifshitz transition directly accounts to the origin of the transport property anomalies in ZrTe527. ARPES revealed two branches of bands near the Г point of ZrTe5: the upper branch (UB) above the Fermi level corresponds to electron like conduction band, and the lower branch (LB) band corresponds to the hole like valence band. There is a clear Lifshitz transition that occurs across 135 K where the Fermi surface topology transforms from an electron like pocket at low temperature to a hole like pocket at high temperature. This Lifshitz transition corresponds to the band structure where the energy gap center just crosses the Fermi level27. Assuming the same scenario to HfTe5, while the bands shift with increasing temperature, high pressure will reduce its energy gap, resulting into lower temperature where Fermi level crosses the gap center. In other word, the temperature of the resistance hump decreases with pressure first. With further increasing pressure, the enhanced interlayer coupling will transform the state from a weak TI to a strong TI thus Tp increases via the pressure. In Weng’s work23, they show that the stacked 3D ZrTe5 compound is located at the vicinity of a transition between strong and weak TI. Only the 2% change of lattice parameter will cause this transition. This can be realized through compression for HfTe5 as shown in Fig. 2. With the pressure increased, the topological state gradually crossed the boundary of weak and strong TI. This is in consistent with the anomaly shift of Tp via pressure shown in Fig. 1.
Further increasing pressure, the maximum of resistance is totally suppressed and the overall resistance shows a metallic transport behavior. A superconducting transition with signature of resistance drop at around 2.7 K was observed at 5.5 GPa, as shown in Fig. 1(b). The transition temperatures (Tc) was defined based on the differential of resistance over temperature (dR/dT)29. With pressure increasing to 6.6 GPa, Tc grows rapidly with resistance drop getting more pronounced and the zero resistance starting to be fully realized. The superconductivity transitions at pressures up to 35 GPa are shown in Fig. 1(b). In the whole pressure range, the highest Tc is achieved at about 5 K, while Tc descends slightly above 20 GPa.
To assure the drop observed in Fig. 1(b) is indeed a superconducting transition, we further measured the resistance versus temperature at variant applied magnetic field(H). The evolutions of Tc at 18 GPa as a function of magnetic field are performed, as shown in Fig. 3, with insets showing the change of Tc with H. It is obvious that Tc shifts toward lower temperature with magnetic field, indicating the transition is superconductivity in nature. According to the Werthamer-Helfand-Hohenberg (WHH) formula30, HC2(0) = −0.691[dHC2(T)/dT]T=Tc*TC, the upper critical field HC2(0) is extrapolated to be 4.1 T with Tc onset, 3.4 T with Tc midpoint and 2.8 T with zero point of Tc at 18 GPa with magnetic field H paralleling to b axis of HfTe5 single crystal.
To determine the carrier density we conducted Hall Effect measurements with a magnetic field H perpendicular to ac plane of HfTe5 single crystal using Van der Pauw method. Carrier density increases almost three orders of magnitude with pressure up to 9.8 GPa, as shown in Fig. 4. It is visual that carrier density increases much faster above 5 GPa than that at lower pressure, which coincides with occurrence of superconductivity. In other world, the variations of Tc with pressure are closely related to the change of carrier density or mobility. The carrier is found to be n-type like in the whole range of pressure which might be the results of two carriers competing.
We performed crystal structure studies based on first-principle calculations on HfTe5 at pressure up to 40 GPa. The enthalpies of the newly predicted stable phases, calculated at the high level of accuracy, are plotted as a function of pressure as shown in Fig. 5. The ambient pressure Cmcm structure is the most stable phase up to 5 GPa, followed by a phase transition to a monoclinic C2/m structure, which corresponds to the appearance of the superconductivity at 5.5 GPa in the transport measurements. Beyond 12 GPa, triclinic P-1 structure becomes the most stable phase at least up to 40 GPa. The crystal structures of C2/m and P-1 are shown in the inset of Fig. 5, respectively. In considerations of transport experiments, the occurrence of superconductivity is possibly related to the transition from Cmcm to monoclinic C2/m. The orthorhombic Cmcm phase is a layered structure with the interlayer distance of 6.9 Å at 5 GPa. Upon compression, the new phase of monoclinic C2/m phase is also of layered structure but with reduced interlayer distance to 3.4 Å at 6 GPa. The interlayer distance along the stacking direction decreases due to the volume shrink. The second high pressure phase with triclinic P-1 symmetry is a compacted cubic like structure.
To further study the structure stability and the predicted new phases, we conducted in situ high-pressure synchrotron X-ray diffraction measurement on the HfTe5 powder sample as shown in Figure S3. New peaks marked with star appeared at 4.69 GPa that indicated a phase transition in well consistent with the theoretical calculations. At higher pressure region the reduced pattern intensity & resolution don’t allow track on the further phase transition.
We further studied the electronic structure of HfTe5 via first-principle calculations by taking into account spin orbital coupling (SOC). Figure S2 shows that HfTe5 is a weak topological insulator at ambient, but transforms to a metal with complicated Fermi surface at high pressures as revealed by the electronic structures at 10 GPa and 20 GPa, respectively.
Referring to the results of electrical transport and predicted structure at high pressures, the phase diagram of HfTe5 as function of pressures is built as shown in Fig. 6. HfTe5 remains the ambient structure below 5.5 GPa with Cmcm symmetry but changes from weak topological character to strong topological character at around 1 GPa. The abnormal peak temperature Tp of resistance forms a minimum valley due to the weak TI to strong TI transition. The Tp reaches highest value ~136 K at 5.5 GPa, while superconductivity occurs. The superconductivity is stable in the pressure range at least up to 35 GPa, with the highest Tc ~ 5 K at 20 GPa.
Conclusion
In summary superconductivity is discovered following the pressure driven transition from a weak Tl to a strong Tl in HfTe5 single crystal.
Methods
Sample synthesis and characterization
Single crystals of HfTe5 were grown by chemical vapor transport. Stoichiometric amounts of Hf (powder, 3 N, Zr nominal 3%) and Te (powder, 5 N) were sealed in a quartz ampoule with iodine (7 mg/mL). Quartz ampoule was placed in a two-zone furnace for almost one month with typical temperature gradient from 500 °C to 400 °C applied. HfTe5 single crystals present long ribbon shape28. The crystal structure of HfTe5 has been determined by powder X-ray diffraction experiments22, which is orthorhombic with space group of Cmcm as shown in Figure S1. Trigonal prismatic chains of HfTe3 run along a axis, and these prismatic chains are linked via parallel zigzag chains of Te atoms along the c axis to form a 2D sheet of HfTe5 in the ac plane. The sheets of HfTe5 stack along the b axis, forming a layered structure23.
High-pressure transport measurements
The transport properties of HfTe5 single crystals at high pressure are measured using the standard four-probe method by diamond anvil cell (DAC) made of nonmagnetic BeCu alloy as described in refs 29 and 31, 32, 33, 34, 35. Pressure was generated by a pair of diamonds with 500 μm culet. A T301 stainless steel gasket, pre-indented from 250 μm to 30 μm thickness, was drilled a center hole with 250 μm in diameter. The gasket was then covered by cubic BN insulator layer to protect electrode from short circuit to gasket. A center hole with a diameter of 100 μm was further drilled at the insulating layer to serve as sample chamber. The HfTe5 single crystal with a dimension of 80 μm * 80 μm * 10 μm was loaded into sample chamber with soft NaCl fine powder as pressure transmitting medium. Slim gold wires of 18 mm in diameter are used as electrodes. Pressure was calibrated by ruby fluorescence shift method for all the experiments. The DAC was placed inside a MagLab system to perform the electric transport experiments35. To ensure equilibrium, the temperature was automatically controlled by the MagLab system with slow temperature change rate. A thermometer located around the sample in the diamond anvil cell was used to monitor sample temperature.
High-pressure synchrotron XRD experiments
The high pressure X-ray diffraction experiments are conducted with a symmetric DAC. The similar procedures to transport measurements are adopted. The X-ray diffraction experiments at high pressure with synchrotron source are performed at HPCAT of Advanced Photon Source in Argonne National Laboratory with a wavelength of 0.4246 Å using a symmetric Mao Bell diamond anvil cell at room temperature. The XRD patterns are collected with a MAR 3450 image plate detector and integrated from the images by using the FIT2d software.
High-pressure structure evolution and electronic band calculation
The structure search simulations are performed through the CALYPSO method, which is specially designed for global structural minimization unbiased by any known structural information. The first principles calculations have been carried out by using the projector augmented wave (PAW) method implemented in Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP). The lattice parameters determined by X-ray diffraction are adopted in our calculations. Generalized gradient approximation (GGA) of Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof type is used. The k-point sampling grids are set to 14 * 14 * 8, 11 * 11 * 7 and 11 * 7 * 3 for the self-consistent calculations of HfTe5 in 0 GPa, 10 GPa and 20 GPa, respectively. The cut-off energy for the plane wave expansion is chosen as 500 eV. Spin-orbit coupling (SOC) is taken into account self-consistently.
Note added: During the submission, we became aware the work reported by Y. Qi et al.34. Both works are uploaded to arXiv within three days (arXiv: 1602.08616 & arXiv: 1603.00514).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Liu, Y. et al. Superconductivity in Hf Te5 across weak to strong topological insulator transition induced via pressures. Sci. Rep. 7, 44367; doi: 10.1038/srep44367 (2017).
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Acknowledgements
This research was supported by NSF & MOST of China through research projects.
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C.Q.J. and G.F.C. conceived & designed the research; Y.L. conducted the high-pressure measurements with assistance from S.J.Z., M.L.J., W.M.L.; Y.J.L. and L.X.Z. synthesized the sample; S.M.N. product the electron band calculation with the supervise of H.M.W., X.D. and Z.F.; F. S. is responsible for the high pressure XRD experiment under the command of W.G.Y. and H.K.M.; X.L.F. conduct the high pressure structure prediction with the help of Q.L. and W.T.Z.; Y.L. analyzed the data and wrote the paper with the review of Y.X.W., Q.Q.L., Y.W.L., R.C.Y., C.Z.G., C.Q.J.and G.F.C. All authors discussed the results and commented on the manuscript.
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Liu, Y., Long, Y., Zhao, L. et al. Superconductivity in HfTe5 across weak to strong topological insulator transition induced via pressures. Sci Rep 7, 44367 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep44367
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep44367
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