Nonreciprocal transport in the superconducting state of the chiral crystal NbGe 2

Due to the lack of inversion, mirror or other roto-inversion symmetries, chiral crystals possess a well-defined handedness which, when combined with time-reversal symmetry breaking from the application of magnetic fields, can give rise to directional dichroism of the electrical transport phenomena v...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inChinese physics B Vol. 33; no. 5; p. 57402
Main Authors Liu 刘, Yonglai 永来, Xu 许, Xitong 锡童, He 何, Miao 苗, Zhao 赵, Haitian 海天, Zeng 曾, Qingqi 庆祺, Yang 杨, Xingyu 星宇, Zou 邹, Youming 优鸣, Du 杜, Haifeng 海峰, Qu 屈, Zhe 哲
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.04.2024
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1674-1056
2058-3834
DOI10.1088/1674-1056/ad334b

Cover

More Information
Summary:Due to the lack of inversion, mirror or other roto-inversion symmetries, chiral crystals possess a well-defined handedness which, when combined with time-reversal symmetry breaking from the application of magnetic fields, can give rise to directional dichroism of the electrical transport phenomena via the magnetochiral anisotropy. In this study, we investigate the nonreciprocal magneto-transport in microdevices of NbGe 2 , a superconductor with structural chirality. A giant nonreciprocal signal from vortex motions is observed during the superconducting transition, with the ratio of nonreciprocal resistance to the normal resistance γ reaching 6×10 5 T −1 ⋅A −1 . Interestingly, the intensity can be adjusted and even sign-reversed by varying the current, the temperature, and the crystalline orientation. Our findings illustrate intricate vortex dynamics and offer ways of manipulation on the rectification effect in superconductors with structural chirality.
ISSN:1674-1056
2058-3834
DOI:10.1088/1674-1056/ad334b