This
artist’s rendition shows magic-angle twisted trilayer graphene, composed of
three honeycomb lattices. The tightly bound electrons (yellow spheres connected
by blue halos) indicate the new structure’s strongly coupled superconducting
state. (Image: Ella Maru Studio)
When two
sheets of graphene are stacked atop each other at just the right angle, the
layered structure morphs into an unconventional superconductor, allowing
electric currents to pass through without resistance or wasted energy.
This
“magic-angle” transformation in bilayer graphene was observed for the first
time in 2018 in the group of Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, the Cecil and Ida Green
Professor of Physics at MIT. Since then, scientists have searched for other
materials that can be similarly twisted into superconductivity, in the emerging
field of “twistronics.” For the most part, no other twisted material has
exhibited superconductivity other than the original twisted bilayer graphene,
until now.
In a paper
appearing in Nature, Jarillo-Herrero and his group report observing
superconductivity in a sandwich of three graphene sheets, the middle layer of
which is twisted at a new angle with respect to the outer layers. This new
trilayer configuration exhibits superconductivity that is more robust than its
bilayer counterpart.
The
researchers can also tune the structure’s superconductivity by applying and
varying the strength of an external electric field. By tuning the trilayer
structure, the researchers were able to produce ultra-strongly coupled superconductivity,
an exotic type of electrical behavior that has rarely been seen in any other
material.
“It wasn’t
clear if magic-angle bilayer graphene was an exceptional thing, but now we know
it’s not alone; it has a cousin in the trilayer case,” Jarillo-Herrero says.
“The discovery of this hypertunable superconductor extends the twistronics
field into entirely new directions, with potential applications in quantum
information and sensing technologies.”
His
co-authors are lead author Jeong Min Park and Yuan Cao at MIT, and Kenji
Watanabe and Takashi Taniguchi of the National Institute of Materials Science
in Japan.
A new
super family
Shortly
after Jarillo-Herrero and his colleagues discovered that superconductivity
could be generated in twisted bilayer graphene, theorists proposed that the
same phenomenon might be seen in three or more layers of graphene.
A sheet of
graphene is an atom-thin layer of graphite, made entirely of carbon atoms
arranged in a honeycomb lattice, like the thinnest, sturdiest chicken wire. The
theorists proposed that if three sheets of graphene were stacked like a
sandwich, with the middle layer rotated by 1.56 degrees with respect to the
outer layers, the twisted configuration would create a kind of symmetry that
would encourage electrons in the material to pair up and flow without
resistance — the hallmark of superconductivity.
“We
thought, why not, let’s give it a try and test this idea,” Jarillo-Herrero
says.
Park and
Cao engineered trilayer graphene structures by carefully slicing a single
gossamer sheet of graphene into three sections and stacking each section on top
of each other at the precise angles predicted by the theorists.
They made
several trilayer structures, each measuring a few micrometers across (about
1/100 the the diameter of a human hair), and three atoms tall.
“Our
structure is a nanosandwich,” Jarillo-Herrero says.
The team
then attached electrodes to either end of the structures, and ran an electric
current through while measuring the amount of energy lost or dissipated in the
material.
“We saw no
energy dissipated, meaning it was a superconductor,” Jarillo-Herrero says. “We
have to give credit to the theorists — they got the angle right.”
He adds
that the exact cause of the structure’s superconductivity — whether due to its
symmetry, as the theorists proposed, or not — remains to be seen, and is
something that the researchers plan to test in future experiments.
“For the
moment we have a correlation, not a causation,” he says. “Now at least we have
a path to possibly explore a large family of new superconductors based on this
symmetry idea.”
“The
biggest bang”
In
exploring their new trilayer structure, the team found they could control its
superconductivity in two ways. With their previous bilayer design, the researchers
could tune its superconductivity by applying an external gate voltage to change
the number of electrons flowing through the material. As they dialed the gate
voltage up and down, they measured the critical temperature at which the
material stopped dissipating energy and became superconductive. In this way,
the team was able to tune bilayer graphene’s superconductivity on and off,
similar to a transistor.
The team
used the same method to tune trilayer graphene. They also discovered a second
way to control the material’s superconductivity that has not been possible in
bilayer graphene and other twisted structures. By using an additional
electrode, the researchers could apply an electric field to change the
distribution of electrons between the structure’s three layers, without
changing the structure’s overall electron density.
“These two
independent knobs now give us a lot of information about the conditions where
superconductivity appears, which can provide insight into the key physics
critical to the formation of such an unusual superconducting state,” Park says.
Using both
methods to tune the trilayer structure, the team observed superconductivity
under a range of conditions, including at a relatively high critical
temperature of 3 kelvins, even when the material had a low density of
electrons. In comparison, aluminum, which is being explored as a superconductor
for quantum computing, has a much higher density of electrons and only becomes
superconductive at about 1 kelvin.
“We found
magic-angle trilayer graphene can be the strongest coupled superconductor,
meaning it superconducts at a relatively high temperature, given how few
electrons it can have,” Jarillo-Herrero says. “It gives the biggest bang for
your buck.”
The
researchers plan to fabricate twisted graphene structures with more than three
layers to see whether such configurations, with higher electron densities, can
exhibit superconductivity at higher temperatures, even approaching room
temperature.
“If we
could make these structures as they are now, at industrial scale, we could make
superconducting bits for quantum computation, or cryogenic superconductive
electronics, photodetectors, etc. We haven’t figured out how to make billions
of these at a time,” Jarillo-Herrrero says.
“Our main
goal is to figure out the fundamental nature of what underlies strongly coupled
superconductivity,” Park says. “Trilayer graphene is not only the
strongest-coupled superconductor ever found, but also the most tunable. With
that tunability we can really explore superconductivity, everywhere in the
phase space.”