Author:
Ran 冉 Feng 峰,Chen 陈 Pan 潘,Li 李 Dingyi 丁艺,Xiong 熊 Peiyu 沛雨,Fan 樊 Zixin 子鑫,Ling 凌 Haoming 浩铭,Liang 梁 Yan 艳,Zhang 张 Jiandi 坚地
Abstract
Exploring dimensionality effects on cuprates is important for understanding the nature of high-temperature superconductivity. By atomically layer-by-layer growth with oxide molecular beam epitaxy, we demonstrate that La2–x
Sr
x
CuO4 (x = 0.15) thin films remain superconducting down to 2 unit cells of thickness but quickly reach the maximum superconducting transition temperature at and above 4 unit cells. By fitting the critical magnetic field (μ
0
H
c2), we show that the anisotropy of the film’s superconductivity increases with decreasing film thickness, indicating that the superconductivity of the film gradually evolves from weak three- to two-dimensional character. These results are helpful to gain more insight into the nature of high-temperature superconductivity with dimensionality.