157 research outputs found
Break-junction experiments on the zero-bias anomaly of non-magnetic and ferromagnetically ordered metals
We have investigated break junctions of normal non-magnetic metals as well as
ferromagnets at low temperatures. The point contacts with radii 0.15 - 15 nm
showed zero-bias anomalies which can be attributed to Kondo scattering at a
single Kondo impurity at the contact or to the switching of a single conducting
channel. The Kondo temperatures derived from the width of the anomalies varied
between 10 and 1000 K. These results agree well with literature data on
atomic-size contacts of the ferromagnets as well as with spear-anvil type
contacts on a wide variety of metals.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Proceedings of the 26th Conference
on Low Temperature Physic
Andreev reflection at point contacts with heavy-fermion UBe13 ?
We comment on a recent Letter by Waelti et al. (PRL 84, 5616 (2000)) on
'Spectroscopic evidence for unconventional superconductivity in UBe13'. We show
- by using the basic Wexler formula - that it is unlikely to observe Andreev
reflection at point contacts between UBe13 and a normal metal. The large
superconducting anomalies usually found for those contacts are mainly due to
the resistive Maxwell resistance vanishing below Tc of UBe13.Comment: 1 page, no figures, RevTeX, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Break junctions of the heavy-fermion superconductors
Mechanical-controllable break junctions of the heavy-fermion superconductors
can show Josephson-like superconducting anomalies. But a systematic study on
the contact size demonstrates that these anomalies are mainly due to Maxwell's
resistance being suppressed in the superconducting heavy-fermion phase. Up to
day, we could not find any superconducting features by vacuum-tunnelling
spectroscopy, providing further evidence for the pair-breaking effect of the
heavy-fermion interfaces.Comment: 5 pages, EPS figures included, REVTeX, to be published in Physica B
9
Phonon-drag induced suppression of the Andreev hole current in superconducting niobium contacts
We have investigated how the Andreev-reflection hole current at ballistic
point contacts responds to a large bias voltage. Its strong suppression could
be explained by the drag excerted by the non-equilibrium phonon wind generated
by high-energy electrons flowing through the contact. The hole - phonon
interaction leads to scattering lengths of the low-energetic holes down to
100\,nm, thereby destroying the coherent retracing of the electron path by the
Andreev-reflected holes.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Proceedings 26th International
Conference on Low Temperature Physic
Towards a Microscopic Theory for Metallic Heavy-Fermion Point Contacts
The bias-dependent resistance R(V) of NS-junctions is calculated using the
Keldysh formalism in all orders of the transfer matrix element. We present a
compact and simple formula for the Andreev current, that results from the
coupling of electrons and holes on the normal side via the anomalous Green's
function on the superconducting side. Using simple BCS Nambu-Green's functions
the well known Blonder-Tinkam-Klapwijk theory can be recovered. Incorporating
the energy-dependent quasi-particle lifetime of the heavy fermions strongly
reduces the Andreev-reflection signal.Comment: 3 pages, TeX type, 1 eps figure include, SCES96 Z\"uric
An improved 2.5 GHz electron pump: single-electron transport through shallow-etched point contacts driven by surface acoustic waves
We present an experimental study of a 2.5 GHz electron pump based on the
quantized acoustoelectric current driven by surface acoustic waves (SAWs)
through a shallow-etched point contact in a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. At low
temperatures and with an additional counter-propagating SAW beam, up to n = 20
current plateaus at I=nef could be resolved, where n is an integer, e the
electron charge, and f the SAW frequency. In the best case the accuracy of the
first plateau at 0.40 nA was estimated to be dI/I = +/- 25 ppm over 0.25 mV in
gate voltage, which is better than previous results.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Electron and hole transmission through superconductor - normal metal interfaces
We have investigated the transmission of electrons and holes through
interfaces between superconducting aluminum (Tc = 1.2 K) and various normal
non-magnetic metals (copper, gold, palladium, platinum, and silver) using
Andreev-reflection spectroscopy at T = 0.1 K. We analyzed the point contacts
with the modified BTK theory that includes Dynes' lifetime as a fitting
parameter G in addition to superconducting energy gap 2D and normal reflection
described by Z. For contact areas from 1 nm^2 to 10000 nm^2 the BTK Z parameter
was 0.5, corresponding to transmission coefficients of about 80 %, independent
of the normal metal. The very small variation of Z indicates that the
interfaces have a negligible dielectric tunneling barrier. Fermi surface
mismatch does not account for the observed transmission coefficient.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Proceedings of the 19th
International Conference on Magnetism ICM2012 (Busan 2012
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