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Dive into the research topics where Zaiyao Fei is active.

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Featured researches published by Zaiyao Fei.


Nature Physics | 2013

Electrical tuning of valley magnetic moment through symmetry control in bilayer MoS2

S. X. Wu; Jason Ross; Gui-Bin Liu; Grant Aivazian; Aaron M. Jones; Zaiyao Fei; Wenguang Zhu; Di Xiao; Wang Yao; David Cobden; Xiaodong Xu

Electric fields can break the structural inversion symmetry in bilayer 2D materials, providing a way of tuning the magnetic moment and Berry curvature. This effect can be probed directly in bilayer MoS2 using optical measurements.


Nature | 2013

Measurement of a solid-state triple point at the metal-insulator transition in VO2

Jae Hyung Park; Jim M. Coy; T. Serkan Kasırga; Chunming Huang; Zaiyao Fei; Scott Hunter; David Cobden

First-order phase transitions in solids are notoriously challenging to study. The combination of change in unit cell shape, long range of elastic distortion and flow of latent heat leads to large energy barriers resulting in domain structure, hysteresis and cracking. The situation is worse near a triple point, where more than two phases are involved. The well-known metal–insulator transition in vanadium dioxide, a popular candidate for ultrafast optical and electrical switching applications, is a case in point. Even though VO2 is one of the simplest strongly correlated materials, experimental difficulties posed by the first-order nature of the metal–insulator transition as well as the involvement of at least two competing insulating phases have led to persistent controversy about its nature. Here we show that studying single-crystal VO2 nanobeams in a purpose-built nanomechanical strain apparatus allows investigation of this prototypical phase transition with unprecedented control and precision. Our results include the striking finding that the triple point of the metallic phase and two insulating phases is at the transition temperature, Ttr = Tc, which we determine to be 65.0 ± 0.1 °C. The findings have profound implications for the mechanism of the metal–insulator transition in VO2, but they also demonstrate the importance of this approach for mastering phase transitions in many other strongly correlated materials, such as manganites and iron-based superconductors.


Nature Physics | 2017

Edge conduction in monolayer WTe2

Zaiyao Fei; Tauno Palomaki; S. X. Wu; Wenjin Zhao; Xinghan Cai; Bosong Sun; Paul Nguyen; Joe Finney; Xiaodong Xu; David Cobden

Experiments showing that a single layer of WTe2 can conduct electricity along its edges while insulating in the interior suggests that this material is a two-dimensional topological insulator. A two-dimensional topological insulator (2DTI) is guaranteed to have a helical one-dimensional edge mode1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11 in which spin is locked to momentum, producing the quantum spin Hall effect and prohibiting elastic backscattering at zero magnetic field. No monolayer material has yet been shown to be a 2DTI, but recently the Weyl semimetal WTe2 was predicted12 to become a 2DTI in monolayer form if a bulk gap opens. Here, we report that, at temperatures below about 100 K, monolayer WTe2 does become insulating in its interior, while the edges still conduct. The edge conduction is strongly suppressed by an in-plane magnetic field and is independent of gate voltage, save for mesoscopic fluctuations that grow on cooling due to a zero-bias anomaly, which reduces the linear-response conductance. Bilayer WTe2 also becomes insulating at low temperatures but does not show edge conduction. Many of these observations are consistent with monolayer WTe2 being a 2DTI. However, the low-temperature edge conductance, for contacts spacings down to 150 nm, never reaches values higher than ∼20 μS, about half the predicted value of e2/h, suggesting significant elastic scattering in the edge.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2012

Photoresponse of a strongly correlated material determined by scanning photocurrent microscopy

T. Serkan Kasırga; Dong Sun; Jae H. Park; Jim M. Coy; Zaiyao Fei; Xiaodong Xu; David Cobden

The generation of a current by light is a key process in optoelectronic and photovoltaic devices. In band semiconductors, depletion fields associated with interfaces separate long-lived photo-induced carriers. However, in systems with strong electron-electron and electron-phonon correlations it is unclear what physics will dominate the photoresponse. Here, we investigate photocurrent in VO(2), an exemplary strongly correlated material known for its dramatic metal-insulator transition at T(c) ≈ 68 °C, which could be useful for optoelectronic detection and switching up to ultraviolet wavelengths. Using scanning photocurrent microscopy on individual suspended VO(2) nanobeams we observe a photoresponse peaked at the metal-insulator boundary but extending throughout both insulating and metallic phases. We determine that the response is photothermal, implying efficient carrier relaxation to a local equilibrium in a manner consistent with strong correlations. Temperature-dependent measurements reveal subtle phase changes within the insulating state. We further demonstrate switching of the photocurrent by optical control of the metal-insulator boundary arrangement. Our work shows the value of applying scanning photocurrent microscopy to nanoscale crystals in the investigation of strongly correlated materials, and the results are relevant for designing and controlling optoelectronic devices employing such materials.


Nature Physics | 2016

Photo-Nernst current in graphene

Helin Cao; Grant Aivazian; Zaiyao Fei; Jason Ross; David Cobden; Xiaodong Xu

When laser light is focused onto graphene devices in a magnetic field a long-range photo-Nernst effect causes photocurrents to be generated along the free edges.


Science | 2018

Gate-induced superconductivity in a monolayer topological insulator

Ebrahim Sajadi; Tauno Palomaki; Zaiyao Fei; Wenjin Zhao; Philip Bement; Christian Olsen; Silvia Luescher; Xiaodong Xu; J. A. Folk; David Cobden

A monolayer of many talents Superconductors with a topologically nontrivial band structure have been predicted to exhibit exotic properties. However, such materials are few and far between. Now, two groups show that the monolayer of the material tungsten ditelluride (WTe2)—already known to be a two-dimensional topological insulator—can also go superconducting. Fatemi et al. and Sajadi et al. varied the carrier density in the monolayer by applying a gate voltage and observed a transition from a topological to a superconducting phase. The findings may lead to the fabrication of devices in which local gating enables topological and superconducting phases to exist in the same material. Science, this issue p. 926, p. 922 Modulating carrier concentration induces a transition from a topological to a superconducting phase in monolayer WTe2. The layered semimetal tungsten ditelluride (WTe2) has recently been found to be a two-dimensional topological insulator (2D TI) when thinned down to a single monolayer, with conducting helical edge channels. We found that intrinsic superconductivity can be induced in this monolayer 2D TI by mild electrostatic doping at temperatures below 1 kelvin. The 2D TI–superconductor transition can be driven by applying a small gate voltage. This discovery offers possibilities for gate-controlled devices combining superconductivity and nontrivial topological properties, and could provide a basis for quantum information schemes based on topological protection.


Nature Materials | 2018

Two-dimensional itinerant ferromagnetism in atomically thin Fe 3 GeTe 2

Zaiyao Fei; Bevin Huang; Paul Malinowski; Wenbo Wang; Tiancheng Song; Joshua Sanchez; Wang Yao; Di Xiao; X.-Y. Zhu; Andrew F. May; Weida Wu; David Cobden; Jiun-Haw Chu; Xiaodong Xu

Discoveries of intrinsic two-dimensional (2D) ferromagnetism in van der Waals (vdW) crystals provide an interesting arena for studying fundamental 2D magnetism and devices that employ localized spins1–4. However, an exfoliable vdW material that exhibits intrinsic 2D itinerant magnetism remains elusive. Here we demonstrate that Fe3GeTe2 (FGT), an exfoliable vdW magnet, exhibits robust 2D ferromagnetism with strong perpendicular anisotropy when thinned down to a monolayer. Layer-number-dependent studies reveal a crossover from 3D to 2D Ising ferromagnetism for thicknesses less than 4 nm (five layers), accompanied by a fast drop of the Curie temperature (TC) from 207 K to 130 K in the monolayer. For FGT flakes thicker than ~15 nm, a distinct magnetic behaviour emerges in an intermediate temperature range, which we show is due to the formation of labyrinthine domain patterns. Our work introduces an atomically thin ferromagnetic metal that could be useful for the study of controllable 2D itinerant ferromagnetism and for engineering spintronic vdW heterostructures5.Metallic ferromagnetism is reported in an exfoliated monolayer of the van der Waals material Fe3GeTe2.


Nature | 2018

Ferroelectric switching of a two-dimensional metal

Zaiyao Fei; Wenjin Zhao; Tauno Palomaki; Bosong Sun; Moira K. Miller; Zhiying Zhao; Jiaqiang Yan; Xiaodong Xu; David Cobden

A ferroelectric is a material with a polar structure whose polarity can be reversed (switched) by applying an electric field1,2. In metals, itinerant electrons screen electrostatic forces between ions, which explains in part why polar metals are very rare3–7. Screening also excludes external electric fields, apparently ruling out the possibility of ferroelectric switching. However, in principle, a thin enough polar metal could be sufficiently penetrated by an electric field to have its polarity switched. Here we show that the topological semimetal WTe2 provides an embodiment of this principle. Although monolayer WTe2 is centro-symmetric and thus non-polar, the stacked bulk structure is polar. We find that two- or three-layer WTe2 exhibits spontaneous out-of-plane electric polarization that can be switched using gate electrodes. We directly detect and quantify the polarization using graphene as an electric-field sensor8. Moreover, the polarization states can be differentiated by conductivity and the carrier density can be varied to modify the properties. The temperature at which polarization vanishes is above 350 kelvin, and even when WTe2 is sandwiched between graphene layers it retains its switching capability at room temperature, demonstrating a robustness suitable for applications in combination with other two-dimensional materials9–12.Two- and three-layer WTe2 exhibits spontaneous out-of-plane electric polarization that can be switched electrically at room temperature and is sufficiently robust for use in applications with other two-dimensional materials.


Archive | 2016

Topological insulator behavior in monolayer WTe2

Zaiyao Fei; Tauno Palomaki; S. X. Wu; Wenjin Zhao; Xinghan Cai; Bosong Sun; Paul Nguyen; Joe Finney; Xiaodong Xu; David Cobden


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Imaging Quantum Spin Hall Edges in Monolayer WTe2

Yanmeng Shi; Joshua Kahn; Ben Niu; Zaiyao Fei; Bosong Sun; Xinghan Cai; Brian Francisco; Di Wu; Zhi-Xun Shen; Xiaodong Xu; David Cobden; Yongtao Cui

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David Cobden

University of Washington

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Xiaodong Xu

University of Washington

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Tauno Palomaki

University of Washington

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Wenjin Zhao

University of Washington

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Paul Nguyen

University of Washington

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Bosong Sun

University of Washington

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Joe Finney

University of Washington

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S. X. Wu

University of Washington

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Di Xiao

Carnegie Mellon University

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Jim M. Coy

University of Washington

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