Abstract

The newly discovered kagome superconductors $A{\mathrm{V}}_{3}{\mathrm{Sb}}_{5}$ ($A=\mathrm{K}$, Rb, Cs) exhibit superconductivity, charge order, and band topology simultaneously. To explore the intricate interplay between the superconducting and charge-density-wave (CDW) orders, we investigate the doping evolution of underlying electronic structures in doped topological kagome superconductors $\mathrm{Cs}{({\mathrm{V}}_{1\ensuremath{-}x}{\mathrm{Ti}}_{x})}_{3}{\mathrm{Sb}}_{5}$ where the Ti dopant introduces hole-like charge carriers. Despite the absence of the CDW phase transition in doped compounds even for the lowest doping level of $x=0.047$, the superconductivity survives in all doped samples with enhanced critical temperatures. The high-resolution angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) measurements reveal that the Ti dopant in the kagome plane lowers the chemical potential, pushing the van Hove singularity (VHS) at $M$ point above the Fermi level. First-principle simulations corroborate the doping evolution of the band structure observed in ARPES, and affirm that the CDW instability does not occur once the VHS moves above the Fermi level, explaining the absence of the CDW ordering in our doped samples $\mathrm{Cs}{({\mathrm{V}}_{1\ensuremath{-}x}{\mathrm{Ti}}_{x})}_{3}{\mathrm{Sb}}_{5}$. Our results also demonstrate a competition between the CDW and superconducting orders in the kagome-metal superconductor ${\mathrm{CsV}}_{3}{\mathrm{Sb}}_{5}$, although the superconductivity is likely inconsequential of the CDW order.

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