45 research outputs found
Zero energy bound states in tunneling conductance spectra at the interface of an s-wave superconductor and a topological insulator in NbN--Au thin film junctions
Measurements of conductance spectra in a superconductor - topological
insulator - normal metal thin film junctions of NbN--Au are
reported. Junctions with ex-situ and in-situ prepared
interfaces were studied. At low temperatures, all the ex-situ junctions showed
coherence peaks in their conductance spectra, but imbedded robust zero bias
conductance peaks were observed only in junctions with a metallic or a metal to
insulator transition below of the NbN electrode. The in-situ
junctions which had about two orders of magnitude lower resistance at low
temperatures, generally showed flat conductance spectra at low bias, with no
coherence or broad Andreev peaks, since the critical current of the NbN
electrode was reached first, at voltage bias below the energy gap of the
superconductor. A weak zero bias conductance peak however, was observed in one
of these junctions. We conclude that significant tunneling barriers, as in the
ex-situ prepared junctions, are essential for the observation of coherence
peaks and the zero energy bound states. The later seem to originate in the -NbN interface, as they are absent in reference Au-NbN junctions
without the topological layer sandwiched in between.Comment: Published versio
Critical current measurements in superconductor - ferromagnet - superconductor junctions of --: No evidence for a dominant proximity induced triplet superconductivity in the ferromagnetic barrier
Transport measurements in ramp-type junctions of
with values of either 80-90 K or
60-70 K are reported. In both type of junctions but without a barrier
("shorts"), the supercurrent densities at 4.2 K reached 7.5 and 3.5 MA/cm,
respectively, indicating the high quality of the fabrication process. Plots of
the critical current versus thickness of the ferromagnetic barrier at 4.2 K
show exponential decays with decay lengths of 1.1 nm for the 90 K phase and 1.4
nm for the 60 K phase, which are much shorter than the relevant coherence
lengths nm or 16 nm of . We thus conclude
that there is no dominant proximity induced triplet superconductivity in the
ferromagnet in our junctions.Comment: 5 figure
Observation of two distinct pairs fluctuation lifetimes and supercurrents in the pseudogap regime of cuprate junctions
Pairs fluctuation supercurrents and inverse lifetimes in the pseudogap regime are reported. These were measured on epitaxial c-axis junctions of the cuprates, with a PrBa[subscript 2]Cu[subscript 3]O[subscript 7βΞ΄] barrier sandwiched in between two YBa[subscript 2]Cu[subscript 3]O[subscript 7βΞ΄] or doped YBa[subscript 2]Cu[subscript 3]O[subscript y] electrodes, with or without magnetic fields parallel to the a-b planes. All junctions had a T[subscript c](high)β85β90 K and a T[subscript c](low)β50β55 K electrodes, allowing us to study pairs fluctuation supercurrents and inverse lifetimes in between these two temperatures. In junctions with a pseudogap electrode under zero field, an excess current due to pair fluctuations was observed which persisted at temperatures above T[subscript c](low), in the pseudogap regime, and up to about T[subscript c](high). No such excess current was observed in junctions without an electrode with a pseudogap. The measured conductance spectra at temperatures above T[subscript c](low) were fitted using a modified fluctuations model by Scalapino [Phys. Rev. Lett. 24, 1052 (1970)] of a junction with a serial resistance. We found that in the pseudogap regime, the conductance vs voltage consists of a narrow peak sitting on top of a very broad peak. This yielded two distinct pairs fluctuation lifetimes in the pseudogap electrode which differ by an order of magnitude up to about T[subscript c](high). Under in-plane fields, these two lifetime values remain separated in two distinct groups, which varied with increasing field moderately. We also found that detection of Amperian pairing [Phys.Β Rev. X 4, 031017 (2014)] in our cuprate junctions is not feasible, due to Josephson vortices penetration into the superconducting electrodes which drove the necessary field above the depairing field.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant DRM-1522575