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Superconductivity and spin canting in spin–orbit-coupled trilayer graphene

Author

Listed:
  • Caitlin L. Patterson

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Owen I. Sheekey

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Trevor B. Arp

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Ludwig F. W. Holleis

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Jin Ming Koh

    (California Institute of Technology
    Harvard University)

  • Youngjoon Choi

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Tian Xie

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Siyuan Xu

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Yi Guo

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Hari Stoyanov

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Evgeny Redekop

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Canxun Zhang

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Grigory Babikyan

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • David Gong

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Haoxin Zhou

    (University of California at Santa Barbara
    University of California)

  • Xiang Cheng

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Takashi Taniguchi

    (National Institute for Materials Science)

  • Kenji Watanabe

    (National Institute for Materials Science)

  • Martin E. Huber

    (University of Colorado Denver)

  • Chenhao Jin

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

  • Étienne Lantagne-Hurtubise

    (California Institute of Technology
    California Institute of Technology
    Université de Sherbrooke)

  • Jason Alicea

    (California Institute of Technology
    California Institute of Technology
    California Institute of Technology)

  • Andrea F. Young

    (University of California at Santa Barbara)

Abstract

Graphene and transition metal dichalcogenide flat-band systems show similar phase diagrams, replete with magnetic1–5 and superconducting6–11 phases. An abiding question has been whether magnetic ordering competes with superconductivity or facilitates pairing. For example, recent studies of Bernal bilayer graphene in the presence of enhanced spin–orbit coupling show a substantial increase in the observed domain and critical temperature Tc of superconducting states12–14; however, the mechanism for this enhancement remains unknown. Here we show that introducing spin–orbit coupling in rhombohedral trilayer graphene (RTG) by substrate proximity effect generates new superconducting pockets for both electron and hole doping, with maximal Tc ≈ 300 mK, which is three times larger than in RTG encapsulated by hexagonal boron nitride. Using local magnetometry, we show that superconductivity straddles a transition between a spin-canted state with a finite in-plane magnetic moment and a state with complete spin–valley locking. This transition is reproduced in our Hartree–Fock calculations, in which this transition is driven by the competition between spin–orbit coupling and the carrier-density-tuned Hund’s interaction. Our experiment suggests that the enhancement of superconductivity by spin–orbit coupling is driven by a quantitative change in the canting angle rather than a change in the ground state symmetry. These results align with a recently proposed mechanism for the enhancement of superconductivity15, in which fluctuations in the spin-canting order contribute to the pairing interaction.

Suggested Citation

  • Caitlin L. Patterson & Owen I. Sheekey & Trevor B. Arp & Ludwig F. W. Holleis & Jin Ming Koh & Youngjoon Choi & Tian Xie & Siyuan Xu & Yi Guo & Hari Stoyanov & Evgeny Redekop & Canxun Zhang & Grigory , 2025. "Superconductivity and spin canting in spin–orbit-coupled trilayer graphene," Nature, Nature, vol. 641(8063), pages 632-638, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:641:y:2025:i:8063:d:10.1038_s41586-025-08863-w
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08863-w
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