107 research outputs found

    Current-voltage characteristics of asymmetric double-barrier Josephson junctions

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    We develop a theory for the current-voltage characteristics of diffusive superconductor-normal metal-superconductor Josephson junctions with resistive interfaces and the distance between the electrodes smaller than the superconducting coherence length. The theory allows for a quantitative analytical and numerical analysis in the whole range of the interface transparencies and asymmetry. We focus on the regime of large interface resistance compared to the resistance of the normal region, when the electron-hole dephasing in the normal region is significant and the finite length of the junction plays a role. In the limit of strong asymmetry we find pronounced current structures at the combination subharmonics of Δ+Δg\Delta+\Delta_g, where Δg\Delta_g is the proximity minigap in the normal region, in addition to the subharmonics of the energy gap 2Δ2\Delta in the electrodes. In the limit of rather transparent interfaces, our theory recovers a known formula for the current in a short mesoscopic connector - a convolution of the current through a single-channel point contact with the transparency distribution for an asymmetric double-barrier potential.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure

    Spatially-resolved probing of a non-equilibrium superconductor

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    Spatially resolved relaxation of non-equilibrium quasiparticles in a superconductor at ultra-low temperatures was experimentally studied. It was found that the quasiparticle injection through a tunnel junction results in modification of the shape of I-V characteristic of a remote `detector' junction. The effect depends on temperature, injection current and proximity to the injector. The phenomena can be understood in terms of creation of quasiparticle charge and energy disequilibrium characterized by two different length scales ΛQ∗\Lambda_{Q^{\ast}} ∼5\sim5 μ\mum and ΛT∗∼\Lambda_{T^{\ast}}\sim 4040 μ\mum. The findings are in good agreement with existing phenomenological models, while more elaborated microscopic theory is mandatory for detailed quantitative comparison with experiment. The results are of fundamental importance for understanding electron transport phenomena in various nanoelectronic circuits.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    On the theory of Josephson effect in a diffusive tunnel junction

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    Specific features of the equilibrium current-carrying state of a Josephson tunnel junction between diffusive superconductors are studied theoretically in the 1D geometry. It is found that the Josephson current induces localized states of electron excitations in the vicinity of the tunnel barrier, which are a continuous analog of Andreev levels in a ballistic junction. The depth of the corresponding ``potential well'' is much greater than the separation between an Andreev level and the continuous energy spectrum boundary for the same transmissivity of the barrier. In contrast to a ballistic junction in which the Josephson current is transported completely by localized excitations, the contribution to current in a diffusive junction comes from whole spectral region near the energy gap boundary, where the density of states differs considerably from its unperturbed value. The correction to the Josephson current in the second order of the barrier transmissivity, which contains the second harmonic of the phase jump, is calculated and it is found that the true expansion parameter of the perturbation theory for a diffusive junction is not the tunneling probability Γ\Gamma itself, but a much larger parameter W=(3ξ0/4l)ΓW = (3\xi_0/4l)\Gamma.Comment: 8 pages, 5 Postscript figures, submitted to Low Temp. Phy
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