Shicheng Lu
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Shicheng Lu.
Nature | 2015
Guanglei Cheng; Michelle Tomczyk; Shicheng Lu; Joshua P. Veazey; Mengchen Huang; Patrick Irvin; Sangwoo Ryu; Hyungwoo Lee; Chang-Beom Eom; C. Stephen Hellberg; Jeremy Levy
Strontium titanate (SrTiO3) is the first and best known superconducting semiconductor. It exhibits an extremely low carrier density threshold for superconductivity, and possesses a phase diagram similar to that of high-temperature superconductors—two factors that suggest an unconventional pairing mechanism. Despite sustained interest for 50 years, direct experimental insight into the nature of electron pairing in SrTiO3 has remained elusive. Here we perform transport experiments with nanowire-based single-electron transistors at the interface between SrTiO3 and a thin layer of lanthanum aluminate, LaAlO3. Electrostatic gating reveals a series of two-electron conductance resonances—paired electron states—that bifurcate above a critical pairing field Bp of about 1–4 tesla, an order of magnitude larger than the superconducting critical magnetic field. For magnetic fields below Bp, these resonances are insensitive to the applied magnetic field; for fields in excess of Bp, the resonances exhibit a linear Zeeman-like energy splitting. Electron pairing is stable at temperatures as high as 900 millikelvin, well above the superconducting transition temperature (about 300 millikelvin). These experiments demonstrate the existence of a robust electronic phase in which electrons pair without forming a superconducting state. Key experimental signatures are captured by a model involving an attractive Hubbard interaction that describes real-space electron pairing as a precursor to superconductivity.
Nano Letters | 2013
Patrick Irvin; Joshua P. Veazey; Guanglei Cheng; Shicheng Lu; C. W. Bark; Sangwoo Ryu; Chang-Beom Eom; Jeremy Levy
Nanoscale control of the metal-insulator transition at the interface between LaAlO(3) and SrTiO(3) provides a pathway for reconfigurable, oxide-based nanoelectronics. Four-terminal transport measurements of LaAlO(3)/SrTiO(3) nanowires at room temperature (T = 300 K) reveal an equivalent 2D Hall mobility greatly surpassing that of bulk SrTiO(3) and approaching that of n-type Si nanowires of comparable dimensions. This large enhancement of mobility is relevant for room-temperature device applications.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Michelle Tomczyk; Guanglei Cheng; Hyungwoo Lee; Shicheng Lu; Anil Annadi; Joshua P. Veazey; Mengchen Huang; Patrick Irvin; Sangwoo Ryu; Chang-Beom Eom; Jeremy Levy
High-mobility complex-oxide heterostructures and nanostructures offer new opportunities for extending the paradigm of quantum transport beyond the realm of traditional III-V or carbon-based materials. Recent quantum transport investigations with LaAlO_{3}/SrTiO_{3}-based quantum dots reveal the existence of a strongly correlated phase in which electrons form spin-singlet pairs without becoming superconducting. Here, we report evidence for the micrometer-scale ballistic transport of electron pairs in quasi-1D LaAlO_{3}/SrTiO_{3} nanowire cavities. In the paired phase, Fabry-Perot-like quantum interference is observed, in sync with conductance oscillations observed in the superconducting regime (at a zero magnetic field). Above a critical magnetic field B_{p}, the electron pairs unbind and the conductance oscillations shift with the magnetic field. These experimental observations extend the regime of ballistic electronic transport to strongly correlated phases.
Physical Review X | 2016
Guanglei Cheng; Michelle Tomczyk; Alexandre B. Tacla; Hyungwoo Lee; Shicheng Lu; Josh Veazey; Mengchen Huang; Patrick Irvin; Sangwoo Ryu; Chang-Beom Eom; Andrew J. Daley; David Pekker; Jeremy Levy
The interface between the two complex oxides LaAlO3 and SrTiO3 has remarkable properties that can be locally reconfigured between conducting and insulating states using a conductive atomic force microscope. Prior investigations of sketched quantum dot devices revealed a phase in which electrons form pairs, implying a strongly attractive electron-electron interaction. Here, we show that these devices with strong electron-electron interactions can exhibit a gate-tunable transition from a pair-tunneling regime to a single-electron (Andreev bound state) tunneling regime where the interactions become repulsive. The electron-electron interaction sign change is associated with a Lifshitz transition where the dxz and dyz bands start to become occupied. This electronically tunable electron-electron interaction, combined with the nanoscale reconfigurability of this system, provides an interesting starting point towards solid-state quantum simulation.
EPL | 2013
Joshua P. Veazey; Guanglei Cheng; Shicheng Lu; Michelle Tomczyk; Feng Bi; Mengchen Huang; Sangwoo Ryu; C. W. Bark; Kwang-Hwan Cho; Chang-Beom Eom; Patrick Irvin; Jeremy Levy
Effects from nonequilibrium superconductivity play a major role in the physics of superconducting nanoelectronics. Notably, charge imbalance arising from the point at which the superconducting device contacts normal-metal leads is prevalent, particularly in reduced dimensions. We investigate nonlocal transport signatures in quasi-1D nanostructures formed at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface. The nonlocal resistances correlate with the bias, magnetic field, and back gate dependence of the superconducting state. We attribute these signatures to charge imbalance or spin-dependent excitations. Understanding and control over these effects are important for further development of superconducting nanoelectronics in this material system, including the ability to probe the interaction of superconductivity and other rich physics in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 on the nanoscale.
Nano Letters | 2018
Anil Annadi; Guanglei Cheng; Hyungwoo Lee; Jung-Woo Lee; Shicheng Lu; Anthony Tylan-Tyler; Megan Briggeman; Michelle Tomczyk; Mengchen Huang; David Pekker; Chang-Beom Eom; Patrick Irvin; Jeremy Levy
SrTiO3-based heterointerfaces support quasi-two-dimensional (2D) electron systems that are analogous to III-V semiconductor heterostructures, but also possess superconducting, magnetic, spintronic, ferroelectric, and ferroelastic degrees of freedom. Despite these rich properties, the relatively low mobilities of 2D complex-oxide interfaces appear to preclude ballistic transport in 1D. Here we show that the 2D LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface can support quantized ballistic transport of electrons and (nonsuperconducting) electron pairs within quasi-1D structures that are created using a well-established conductive atomic-force microscope (c-AFM) lithography technique. The nature of transport ranges from truly single-mode (1D) to three-dimensional (3D), depending on the applied magnetic field and gate voltage. Quantization of the lowest e2/ h plateau indicate a ballistic mean-free path lMF ∼ 20 μm, more than 2 orders of magnitude larger than for 2D LaAlO3/SrTiO3 heterostructures. Nonsuperconducting electron pairs are found to be stable in magnetic fields as high as B = 11 T and propagate ballistically with conductance quantized at 2 e2/ h. Theories of one-dimensional (1D) transport of interacting electron systems depend crucially on the sign of the electron-electron interaction, which may help explain the highly ballistic transport behavior. The 1D geometry yields new insights into the electronic structure of the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 system and offers a new platform for the study of strongly interacting 1D electronic systems.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2014
Akash Levy; Feng Bi; Mengchen Huang; Shicheng Lu; Michelle Tomczyk; Guanglei Cheng; Patrick Irvin; Jeremy Levy
Oxide nanoelectronics is a rapidly growing field which seeks to develop novel materials with multifunctional behavior at nanoscale dimensions. Oxide interfaces exhibit a wide range of properties that can be controlled include conduction, piezoelectric behavior, ferromagnetism, superconductivity and nonlinear optical properties. Recently, methods for controlling these properties at extreme nanoscale dimensions have been discovered and developed. Here are described explicit step-by-step procedures for creating LaAlO3/SrTiO3 nanostructures using a reversible conductive atomic force microscopy technique. The processing steps for creating electrical contacts to the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface are first described. Conductive nanostructures are created by applying voltages to a conductive atomic force microscope tip and locally switching the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface to a conductive state. A versatile nanolithography toolkit has been developed expressly for the purpose of controlling the atomic force microscope (AFM) tip path and voltage. Then, these nanostructures are placed in a cryostat and transport measurements are performed. The procedures described here should be useful to others wishing to conduct research in oxide nanoelectronics.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Yun-Yi Pai; Hyungwoo Lee; Jung-Woo Lee; A. Annadi; Guanglei Cheng; Shicheng Lu; Michelle Tomczyk; Mengchen Huang; Chang-Beom Eom; Patrick Irvin; Jeremy Levy
We examine superconductivity in LaAlO_{3}/SrTiO_{3} channels with widths that transition from the 1D to the 2D regime. The superconducting critical current is independent of the channel width and increases approximately linearly with the number of parallel channels. Signatures of electron pairing outside of the superconducting regime are also found to be independent of the channel width. Collectively, these results indicate that superconductivity exists at the boundary of these channels and is absent within the interior region of the channels. The intrinsic 1D nature of superconductivity at the LaAlO_{3}/SrTiO_{3} interface imposes strong physical constraints on possible electron pairing mechanisms.
Physical Review X | 2013
Guanglei Cheng; Joshua P. Veazey; Patrick Irvin; Cheng Cen; Daniela F. Bogorin; Feng Bi; Mengchen Huang; Shicheng Lu; C. W. Bark; Sangwoo Ryu; Kwang-Hwan Cho; Chang-Beom Eom; Jeremy Levy
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Guanglei Cheng; A. Annadi; Shicheng Lu; Hyungwoo Lee; Jung-Woo Lee; Mengchen Huang; Chang-Beom Eom; Patrick Irvin; Jeremy Levy