5,806 research outputs found

    Proximity Effect Enhancement Induced by Roughness of SN Interface

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    Critical temperature reduction ΔTc\Delta T_c is considered for a thin film of a layered superconductor (S) with a rough surface covered by a thick layer of a normal metal (N). The roughness of the SN interface increases the penetration of electrons from the normal metal into the superconductor and leads to an enhancement of the proximity effect. The value of ΔTc\Delta T_c induced by the roughness of the SN interface can be much higher than ΔTc\Delta T_c for a film with a plain surface for an extremely anisotropic layered superconductor with the coherence lengths ξa,ξbξc\xi_a,\xi_b\gg\xi_c.Comment: 2 page

    A Discrete Version of the Inverse Scattering Problem and the J-matrix Method

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    The problem of the Hamiltonian matrix in the oscillator and Laguerre basis construction from the S-matrix is treated in the context of the algebraic analogue of the Marchenko method.Comment: 11 pages. The Laguerre basis case is adde

    Quantitative Simulation of the Superconducting Proximity Effect

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    A numerical method is developed to calculate the transition temperature of double or multi-layers consisting of films of super- and normal conductors. The approach is based on a dynamic interpretation of Gorkov's linear gap equation and is very flexible. The mean free path of the different metals, transmission through the interface, ratio of specular reflection to diffusive scattering at the surfaces, and fraction of diffusive scattering at the interface can be included. Furthermore it is possible to vary the mean free path and the BCS interaction NV in the vicinity of the interface. The numerical results show that the normalized initial slope of an SN double layer is independent of almost all film parameters except the ratio of the density of states. There are only very few experimental investigations of this initial slope and they consist of Pb/Nn double layers (Nn stands for a normal metal). Surprisingly the coefficient of the initial slope in these experiments is of the order or less than 2 while the (weak coupling) theory predicts a value of about 4.5. This discrepancy has not been recognized in the past. The autor suggests that it is due to strong coupling behavior of Pb in the double layers. The strong coupling gap equation is evaluated in the thin film limit and yields the value of 1.6 for the coefficient. This agrees much better with the few experimental results that are available. PACS: 74.45.+r, 74.62.-c, 74.20.F

    The influence of spin-dependent phases of tunneling electrons on the conductance of a point ferromagnet/isolator/d-wave superconductor contact

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    The influence of phase shifts of electron waves passing through and reflected by the potential barrier on the Andreev reflection in a ferromagnet/isolator/d-wave superconductor (FIS) contact is studied. It is found that in a superconductor the surface spin-dependent Andreev bound states inside the superconducting gap are formed as a result of the interference of electron-like and hole-like quasiparticles due to repeated Andreev reflections. The peak in the conductance of the FIS contact at the zero potential for the (110)-oriented superconductor disappears rapidly as the polarization of a ferromagnet increases, whereas for the (100)-oriented superconductor it appears. The physical reason for this behavior of conductance is discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Severe discrepancies between experiment and theory in the superconducting proximity effect

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    The superconducting proximity effect is investigated for SN double layers in a regime where the resulting transition temperature T_{c} does not depend on the mean free paths of the films and, within limits, not on the transparency of the interface. This regime includes the thin film limit and the normalized initial slope S_{sn}= (d_{s}/T_{s})|dT_{c}/dd_{n}|. The experimental results for T_{c} are compared with a numerical simulation which was recently developed in our group. The results for the SN double layers can be devided into three groups: (i) When N = Cu, Ag, Au, Mg a disagreement between experiment and theory by a factor of the order of three is observed, (ii) When N = Cd, Zn, Al the disagreement between experiment and theory is reduced to a factor of about 1.5, (iii) When N = In, Sn a reasonably good agreement between experiment and theory is observed

    NN potentials from inverse scattering in the J-matrix approach

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    An approximate inverse scattering method [7,8] has been used to construct separable potentials with the Laguerre form factors. As an application, we invert the phase shifts of proton-proton in the 1S0^1S_0 and 3P23F2^3P_2-^3F_2 channels and neutron-proton in the 3S13D1^3S_1-^3D_1 channel elastic scattering. In the latter case the deuteron wave function of a realistic npnp potential was used as input.Comment: LaTex2e, 17 pages, 3 Postscript figures; corrected typo

    Proximity Effect in Normal Metal - High Tc Superconductor Contacts

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    We study the proximity effect in good contacts between normal metals and high Tc (d-wave) superconductors. We present theoretical results for the spatially dependent order parameter and local density of states, including effects of impurity scattering in the two sides, s-wave pairing interaction in the normal metal side (attractive or repulsive), as well as subdominant s-wave paring in the superconductor side. For the [100] orientation, a real combination d+s of the order parameters is always found. The spectral signatures of the proximity effect in the normal metal includes a suppression of the low-energy density of states and a finite energy peak structure. These features are mainly due to the impurity self-energies, which dominate over the effects of induced pair potentials. For the [110] orientation, for moderate transparencies, induction of a d+is order parameter on the superconductor side, leads to a proximity induced is order parameter also in the normal metal. The spectral signatures of this type of proximity effect are potentially useful for probing time-reversal symmetry breaking at a [110] interface.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure

    Shadow on the wall cast by an Abrikosov vortex

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    At the surface of a d-wave superconductor, a zero-energy peak in the quasiparticle spectrum can be observed. This peak appears due to Andreev bound states and is maximal if the nodal direction of the d-wave pairing potential is perpendicular to the boundary. We examine the effect of a single Abrikosov vortex in front of a reflecting boundary on the zero-energy density of states. We can clearly see a splitting of the low-energy peak and therefore a suppression of the zero-energy density of states in a shadow-like region extending from the vortex to the boundary. This effect is stable for different models of the single Abrikosov vortex, for different mean free paths and also for different distances between the vortex center and the boundary. This observation promises to have also a substantial influence on the differential conductance and the tunneling characteristics for low excitation energies.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Non-local electron transport and cross-resistance peak in NSN heterostructures

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    We develop a microscopic theory describing the peak in the temperature dependence of the non-local resistance of three-terminal NSN devices. This peak emerges at sufficiently high temperatures as a result of a competition between quasiparticle/charge imbalance and subgap (Andreev) contributions to the conductance matrix. Both the height and the shape of this peak demonstrate the power law dependence on the superconductor thickness LL in contrast to the zero-temperature non-local resistance which decays (roughly) exponentially with increasing LL. A similar behavior was observed in recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Anatomy of point-contact Andreev reflection spectroscopy from the experimental point of view (review)

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    We review application of point-contact Andreev-reflection spectroscopy to study elemental superconductors, where theoretical conditions for the smallness of the point-contact size with respect to the characteristic lengths in the superconductor can be satisfied. We discuss existing theoretical models and identify new issues that have to be solved, especially when applying this method to investigate more complex superconductors. We will also demonstrate that some aspects of point-contact Andreev-reflection spectroscopy still need to be addressed even when investigating ordinary metals.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figs. V2: Ref.60 and footnote 3 are added, a number of minor fixe
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