Observation of Superconductivity in
Granular Bi Nanowires Fabricated by
Electrodeposition
Mingliang Tian,*
,²,‡
Jinguo Wang,
²,§
Nitesh Kumar,
²,‡
Tianheng Han,
², |
Yoji Kobayashi,
⊥
Ying Liu,
‡
Thomas E. Mallouk,*
,²,‡, ⊥
and Moses H. W. Chan*
,²,‡
Center for Nanoscale Science (CNS), Department of Physics, Department of
Chemistry, and Materials Research Institute (MRI), PennsylVania State UniVersity,
UniVersity Park, PennsylVania 16802-6300, and Department of Physics,
the Hong Kong UniVersity of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay,
Hong Kong, People’s Republic of China
Received August 2, 2006; Revised Manuscript Received October 26, 2006
ABSTRACT
Bulk rhombohedral Bi at ambient pressure is a well-known semimetal, and its transition to a superconductor has not been observed, at least
down to 50 mK. We report that, unlike bulk rhombohedral Bi, granular Bi nanowires with well-defined rhombohedral grains of ∼10 nm diameter,
fabricated by electrochemically depositing Bi into porous polycarbonate membranes at ambient pressure, are superconducting with two transition
temperatures, T
c
, of 7.2 and 8.3 K. These T
c
values coincide with T
c
values of the high-pressure phases Bi-III and Bi-V, respectively. Analysis
of our structural and transport data indicates that the superconductivity in granular Bi nanowires probably arises from grain boundary areas
where there are structural reconstructions between the grains showing a preferred orientation within a small angular distribution.
It is well-known that bulk rhombohedral Bi at ambient
pressure is not a superconductor down to 50 mK.
1
Unlike
other materials, rhombohedral Bi can be a metal, semimetal,
and semiconductor. Its electronic properties depend sensi-
tively on the sample size and geometry (bulk,
1,2
films,
3,4
cylinder or filament,
5
nanowires,
6-10
or tubes
11
), quality
(defects or impurity), and morphology (single-crystal,
1-6
polycrystal
4,8
or granular
9
). Because of its unusually rich
electronic properties, Bi has long been the subject of
experimental and theoretical studies.
1-11
At high pressure, however, Bi is superconducting at low
temperatures due to the formation of high-pressure metallic
polymorphs, namely, monoclinic Bi-II at 2.55 GPa,
12,13
a
complex tetragonal Bi-III at 2.7 GPa,
12,14-16
and a body-
centered cubic (bcc) Bi-V at 7.7 GPa.
12,16,17
The transition
temperatures of these polymorphic phases are respectively
3.9,
18,19
7.2,
18-20
and 8.3 K.
20,21
It was found that these high-
pressure phases could be preserved in a metastable state by
subjecting the bulk crystal to compression cycles at room
temperature and releasing the pressure at helium tempera-
tures.
20
When the samples are annealed at a temperature
higher than 20 K, the metastable high-pressure phases
disappear. In these compression cycles, internal microstresses
are usually formed as a result of plastic deformation due to
an increase in the number of dislocations and a greater degree
of polycrystallinity.
20
At ambient pressure, Bi can be
superconducting under three specific conditions: (1) Bi
amorphous film with disorder on the atomic scale, fabricated
by condensing Bi onto a liquid helium cooled substrate. The
T
c
is around 6.0 K.
22
(2) Bi granular composite films,
fabricated by codepositing Bi and matrix gas (A ) Kr, Xe,
O
2
, and H
2
) onto cold substrates at T < 40 K. These
composite films consist of rhombohedral Bi grains sur-
rounded by insulating solid matrix gas with a concentration
ratio of Bi:A ) x:(1 - x) with x ∼ 0.34-0.89.
23,24
The
transition temperature, which is generally below 5.5 K, is
strongly grain size dependent and is influenced by the
surrounding solid matrix. Without the solid gas matrix, a
pure Bi granular film is not superconducting. The supercon-
ducting property in these granular Bi composite films was
initially interpreted by Weitzel and Micklitz
23
as a quantum
size effect due to a strongly enhanced density of states at
the Bi grain surface. However, Vossloh, Holdenried, and
Micklitz
25
presented new data that indicated that the super-
conductivity in Bi granular composite films is not related to
the quantum size effect. They speculated that the original
* Corresponding authors. E-mail address: mut1@psu.edu (Tian),
tom@chem.psu.edu (Tom), and chan@phys.psu.edu (Chan).
²
Center for Nanoscale Science (CNS), Pennsylvania State University.
‡
Department of Physics, Pennsylvania State University.
§
Materials Research Institute (MRI), Pennsylvania State University.
|
Department of Physics, the Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology.
⊥
Department of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University.
NANO
LETTERS
2006
Vol. 6, No. 12
2773-2780
10.1021/nl0618041 CCC: $33.50 © 2006 American Chemical Society
Published on Web 11/10/2006