English

Pressure-induced Superconductivity in AgSbTe2

Superconductivity 2026-03-19 v1

Abstract

AgSbTe2 is a well-known thermoelectric material with a high Seebeck coefficient and intrinsically low thermal conductivity, but its behavior under pressure remains largely unexplored. Here we report a systematic investigation of the structural, electronic, and transport properties of non-stoichiometric AgSbTe2 under high pressure. At ambient pressure, the material can be described as having a cubic crystal structure that remains stable up to 21.7 GPa beyond which it loses long-range structural order, while its crystal system fully recovers upon decompression. Remarkably, superconductivity emerges at a very low pressure of 0.38 GPa with an onset superconducting critical temperature (Tc) of 3.2 K. Tc increases with increasing pressure, reaching 6.9 K at 31.9 GPa, and peaks at 7.4 K during decompression. Magnetic-field-dependent transport measurements and electronic structure calculations reveal an evolution of the superconducting state driven by an enhanced electronic density of states at the Fermi level under compression. Our findings uncover pressure-induced superconductivity in AgSbTe2 and demonstrate that pressure can effectively tune the electronic ground state of thermoelectric materials, extending their functionality beyond thermoelectric energy conversion.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2603.17846,
  title  = {Pressure-induced Superconductivity in AgSbTe2},
  author = {Sudaice Kazibwe and Bishnu Karki and Wencheng Lu and Zhongxin Liang and Minghong Sui and Melissa Gooch and Zhifeng Ren and Pavan Hosur and Timothy A. Strobel and Ching-Wu Chu and Liangzi Deng},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.17846},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

28 pages, 5 figures, 8 Supplementary information figures

R2 v1 2026-07-01T11:26:24.915Z