Van der Waals materials provide an ideal platform to explore superconductivity in the presence of strong electronic correlations, which are detrimental of the conventional phonon-mediated Cooper pairing in the BCS-Eliashberg theory1 and, simultaneously, promote magnetic fluctuations. Despite recent progress in understanding superconductivity in layered materials, the glue pairing mechanism remains largely unexplored in the single-layer limit, where electron-electron interactions are dramatically enhanced. Here we report experimental evidence of unconventional Cooper pairing mediated by magnetic excitations in single-layer NbSe2, a model strongly correlated 2D material. Our high-resolution spectroscopic measurements reveal a characteristic spin resonance excitation in the density of states that emerges from the quasiparticle coupling to a collective bosonic mode. This resonance, observed along with higher harmonics, gradually vanishes by increasing the temperature and upon applying a magnetic field up to the critical values (TC and HC2), which sets an unambiguous link to the superconducting state. Furthermore, we find clear anticorrelation between the energy of the spin resonance and its harmonics and the local superconducting gap({Delta}), which invokes a pairing of electronic origin associated with spin fluctuations. Our findings demonstrate the fundamental role that electronic correlations play in the development of superconductivity in 2D transition metal dichalcogenides, and open the tantalizing possibility to explore unconventional superconductivity in simple, scalable and transferable 2D superconductors.

Published in: "arXiv Material Science".