论文标题
在2H型过渡金属二进制中,依赖尺寸的电荷密度波的模式和驱动力
Patterns and driving forces of dimensionality-dependent charge density waves in 2H-type transition metal dichalcogenides
论文作者
论文摘要
二维(2D)材料已成为探索和操纵新型集体电子状态的肥沃游乐场。最近的实验在高度结晶的材料中揭示了从磁性到铁电的高度结晶材料的各种鲁棒2D阶,从超导性到电荷密度波(CDW)不稳定性。尤其是后者,即使在具有等电物种的同一材料家族中,也以各种模式出现。此外,到目前为止,它们如何随维度发展而发展。在这里,我们提出了一个通用框架,该框架提供了四个等函数过渡金属二进制金属元素2H-mx $ _2 $(M = NB,TA和X = S,SE,SE)的2H多型CDW订购的图像。我们首先通过实验表明,尽管NBSE $ _2 $在2D限制中表现出强烈增强的CDW订单,但Tase $ _2 $和TAS $ _2 $的相反趋势存在,CDW完全不在NBS $ _2 $中,从散装到单层。然后,这种不同的行为被证明是三个因素之间微妙而深刻的竞争的结果:离子电荷转移,电子波耦合以及电子波函数的扩散扩展。尽管它很简单,但本质上,我们的方法可以应用于其他准2D材料,以在不同的厚度下对其CDW响应说明,从而为这种有趣的量子现象及其基本机制提供了新的启示。
Two-dimensional (2D) materials have become a fertile playground for the exploration and manipulation of novel collective electronic states. Recent experiments have unveiled a variety of robust 2D orders in highly-crystalline materials ranging from magnetism to ferroelectricity and from superconductivity to charge density wave (CDW) instability. The latter, in particular, appears in diverse patterns even within the same family of materials with isoelectronic species. Furthermore, how they evolve with dimensionality has so far remained elusive. Here we propose a general framework that provides a unfied picture of CDW ordering in the 2H polytype of four isoelectronic transition metal dichalcogenides 2H-MX$_2$ (M=Nb, Ta and X=S, Se). We first show experimentally that whilst NbSe$_2$ exhibits a strongly enhanced CDW order in the 2D limit, the opposite trend exists for TaSe$_2$ and TaS$_2$, with CDW being entirely absent in NbS$_2$ from its bulk to the monolayer. Such distinct behaviours are then demonstrated to be the result of a subtle, yet profound, competition between three factors: ionic charge transfer, electron-phonon coupling, and the spreading extension of the electronic wave functions. Despite its simplicity, our approach can, in essence, be applied to other quasi-2D materials to account for their CDW response at different thicknesses, thereby shedding new light on this intriguing quantum phenomenon and its underlying mechanisms.