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Possible light-induced superconductivity in K3C60 at high temperature

Abstract:
The non-equilibrium control of emergent phenomena in solids is an important research frontier, encompassing effects such as the optical enhancement of superconductivity. Nonlinear excitation of certain phonons in bilayer copper oxides was recently shown to induce superconducting-like optical properties at temperatures far greater than the superconducting transition temperature, Tc (refs 4, 5, 6). This effect was accompanied by the disruption of competing charge-density-wave correlations, which explained some but not all of the experimental results. Here we report a similar phenomenon in a very different compound, K3C60. By exciting metallic K3C60 with mid-infrared optical pulses, we induce a large increase in carrier mobility, accompanied by the opening of a gap in the optical conductivity. These same signatures are observed at equilibrium when cooling metallic K3C60 below Tc (20 kelvin). Although optical techniques alone cannot unequivocally identify non-equilibrium high-temperature superconductivity, we propose this as a possible explanation of our results.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1038/nature16522

Authors



Publisher:
Nature Publishing Group
Journal:
Nature More from this journal
Volume:
530
Issue:
2016
Pages:
461–464
Publication date:
2016-02-08
Acceptance date:
2015-12-04
DOI:
EISSN:
1476-4687
ISSN:
0028-0836


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:600817
UUID:
uuid:951173a1-2684-4bdf-a572-de7ec81c2c76
Local pid:
pubs:600817
Source identifiers:
600817
Deposit date:
2016-02-22

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