76 research outputs found
Conductivity and Atomic Structure of Isolated Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes
We report associated high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM)
and transport measurements on a series of isolated multiwalled carbon
nanotubes. HRTEM observations, by revealing relevant structural features of the
tubes, shed some light on the variety of observed transport behaviors, from
semiconducting to quasi-metallic type. Non Ohmic behavior is observed for
certain samples which exhibit "bamboo like" structural defects. The resistance
of the most conducting sample, measured down to 20 mK, exhibits a pronounced
maximum at 0.6 K and strong positive magnetoresistance.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Superconductivity in Ropes of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes
We report measurements on ropes of Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes (SWNT) in
low-resistance contact to non-superconducting (normal) metallic pads, at low
voltage and at temperatures down to 70 mK. In one sample, we find a two order
of magnitude resistance drop below 0.55 K, which is destroyed by a magnetic
field of the order of 1T, or by a d.c. current greater than 2.5 microA. These
features strongly suggest the existence of superconductivity in ropes of SWNT.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Quantum Noise Measurement of a Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dot in the Kondo Regime
The current emission noise of a carbon nanotube quantum dot in the Kondo
regime is measured at frequencies of the order or higher than the
frequency associated with the Kondo effect , with the Kondo
temperature. The carbon nanotube is coupled via an on-chip resonant circuit to
a quantum noise detector, a superconductor-insulator-superconductor junction.
We find for a Kondo effect related singularity at a
voltage bias , and a strong reduction of this singularity
for , in good agreement with theory. Our experiment
constitutes a new original tool for the investigation of the non-equilibrium
dynamics of many-body phenomena in nanoscale devices.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Superconductivity in Ropes of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes
We report measurements on ropes of Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes (SWNT) in
low-resistance contact to non-superconducting (normal) metallic pads, at low
voltage and at temperatures down to 70 mK. In one sample, we find a two order
of magnitude resistance drop below 0.55 K, which is destroyed by a magnetic
field of the order of 1T, or by a d.c. current greater than 2.5 microA. These
features strongly suggest the existence of superconductivity in ropes of SWNT.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Geometrical enhancement of the proximity effect in quantum wires with extended superconducting tunnel contacts
We study Andreev reflection in a ballistic one-dimensional channel coupled in
parallel to a superconductor via a tunnel barrier of finite length . The
dependence of the low-energy Andreev reflection probability on
reveals the existence of a characteristic length scale beyond which
is enhanced up to unity despite the low interfacial transparency. The
Andreev reflection enhancement is due to the strong mixing of particle and hole
states that builds up in contacts exceeding the coherence length ,
leading to a small energy gap (minigap) in the density of states of the normal
system. The role of the geometry of such hybrid contacts is discussed in the
context of the experimental observation of zero-bias Andreev anomalies in the
resistance of extended carbon nanotube/superconductor junctions in field effect
transistor setups.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures; minor revisions including added Ref. 7 and inset
to Fig. 3b; version as accepted for publication to Phys. Rev.
Long-lived Andreev states as evidence for protected hinge modes in a bismuth nanoring Josephson junction
Second-order topological insulators are characterized by helical, non-spin-degenerate one-dimensional states running along opposite crystal hinges with no backscattering. Injecting superconducting pairs therefore entails splitting Cooper pairs into two families of helical Andreev states of opposite helicity, one at each hinge. Here we provide evidence for such separation via the measurement and analysis of the switching supercurrent statistics of a crystalline nanoring of bismuth. Using a phenomenological model of two helical Andreev hinge modes, we find that pairs relax at a rate comparable to individual quasiparticles, in contrast to the much faster pair relaxation of non-topological systems. This constitutes a unique telltale sign of the spatial separation of topological helical hinges
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