KeywordsOxide superconductors, quantum phase transitions, strain tuning of superconductivity Abstract Superconducting strontium titanate (STO) is in the spotlight as a low carrier concentration semiconductor in proximity to polar order. Its superconducting pairing mechanism poses an open fundamental challenge, which may be resolved by controlling how strongly the superconducting and polar orders interact. Here, we show for the first time that non-monotonic superconducting transition temperature behavior in uniaxially compressed STO can occur, revealing a reduction followed by a peak in the superconducting transition temperature. The corresponding displacements in the lattice are extremely small, in the sub picometer range, indicating that this material approaches a singularity in electron-phonon coupling, consistent with STO transforming to the polar (ferroelectric) phase that influences the superconductivity.
Main textThe mechanism of superconducting pairing in doped strontium titanate (STO) is a major fundamental open question that has stimulated intense debate (1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12). Several rather new experimental works have demonstrated the enhancement of superconductivity in STO via changes in the crystal composition (13-15) and uniaxial or epitaxial strain techniques (16,17), and have revealed the potential importance of the ferroelectric quantum phase transition to this material's mysterious electron pairing (3, 7, 18-24, 13, 14, 10, 25, 26). Herrera et al. (16,27) demonstrated that tension in the [001] tetragonal direction in STO can lead to a large enhancement of the critical temperature. However, only some lower-doping STO samples measured in the past (28) showed minor enhancement on compression, while higher-