378 research outputs found
The Josephson critical current in a long mesoscopic S-N-S junction
We carry out an extensive experimental and theoretical study of the Josephson
effect in S-N-S junctions made of a diffusive normal metal (N) embedded between
two superconducting electrodes (S). Our experiments are performed on Nb-Cu-Nb
junctions with highly-transparent interfaces. We give the predictions of the
quasiclassical theory in various regimes on a precise and quantitative level.
We describe the crossover between the short and the long junction regimes and
provide the temperature dependence of the critical current using dimensionless
units and where
is the Thouless energy. Experimental and theoretical results are in excellent
quantitative agreement.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, slighly modified version, publishe
Density of states in a superconductor carrying a supercurrent
We have measured the tunneling density of states (DOS) in a superconductor
carrying a supercurrent or exposed to an external magnetic field. The pair
correlations are weakened by the supercurrent, leading to a modification of the
DOS and to a reduction of the gap. As predicted by the theory of
superconductivity in diffusive metals, we find that this effect is similar to
that of an external magnetic field.Comment: To be published in Physical Review Letter
Shot noise measurements in NS junctions and the semiclassical theory
We present a new analysis of shot noise measurements in normal
metal-superconductor (NS) junctions [X. Jehl et al., Nature 405, 50 (2000)],
based on a recent semiclassical theory. The first calculations at zero
temperature assuming quantum coherence predicted shot noise in NS contacts to
be doubled with respect to normal contacts. The semiclassical approach gives
the first opportunity to compare data and theory quantitatively at finite
voltage and temperature. The doubling of shot noise is predicted up to the
superconducting gap, as already observed, confirming that phase coherence is
not necessary. An excellent agreement is also found above the gap where the
noise follows the normal case.Comment: 2 pages, revtex, 2 eps figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Magnetic Flux Periodic Response of Nano-perforated Ultrathin Superconducting Films
We have patterned a hexagonal array of nano-scale holes into a series of
ultrathin, superconducting Bi/Sb films with transition temperatures 2.65 K
5 K. These regular perforations give the films a phase-sensitive
periodic response to an applied magnetic field. By measuring this response in
their resistive transitions, , we are able to distinguish regimes in
which fluctuations of the amplitude, both the amplitude and phase, and the
phase of the superconducting order parameter dominate the transport. The
portion of dominated by amplitude fluctuations is larger in lower
films and thus, grows with proximity to the superconductor to
insulator transition.Comment: Revised title, abstract, text, figure
Re-entrance of the metallic conductance in a mesoscopic proximity superconductor
We present an experimental study of the diffusive transport in a normal metal
near a superconducting interface, showing the re-entrance of the metallic
conductance at very low temperature. This new mesoscopic regime comes in when
the thermal coherence length of the electron pairs exceeds the sample size.
This re-entrance is suppressed by a bias voltage given by the Thouless energy
and can be strongly enhanced by an Aharonov Bohm flux. Experimental results are
well described by the linearized quasiclassical theory.Comment: improved version submitted to Phys. Rev. lett., 4 pages, 5 included
epsf figure
Structure of the superconducting state in a fully frustrated wire network with dice lattice geometry
The superconducting state in a fully frustrated wire network with the dice
lattice geometry is investigated in the vicinity of the transition temperature.
Using Abrikosov's variational procedure, we write the Ginzburg-Landau free
energy functional projected on its unstable supspace as an effective model on
the triangular lattice of sixfold coordinated sites. For this latter model, we
obtain a large class of degenerate equilibrium configurations in one to one
correspondence with those previously constructed for the pure XY model on the
maximally frustrated dice lattice. The entropy of these states is proportional
to the linear size of the system. Finally we show that magnetic interactions
between currents provide a degeneracy lifting mechanism.Comment: The final version (as published in Phys. Rev. B). Substantial
corrections have been made to Sec.
Field-effect control of superconductivity and Rashba spin-orbit coupling in top-gated LaAlO3/SrTiO3 devices
The recent development in the fabrication of artificial oxide
heterostructures opens new avenues in the field of quantum materials by
enabling the manipulation of the charge, spin and orbital degrees of freedom.
In this context, the discovery of two-dimensional electron gases (2-DEGs) at
LAlO3/SrTiO3 interfaces, which exhibit both superconductivity and strong Rashba
spin-orbit coupling (SOC), represents a major breakthrough. Here, we report on
the realisation of a field-effect LaAlO3/SrTiO3 device, whose physical
properties, including superconductivity and SOC, can be tuned over a wide range
by a top-gate voltage. We derive a phase diagram, which emphasises a
field-effect-induced superconductor-to-insulator quantum phase transition.
Magneto-transport measurements indicate that the Rashba coupling constant
increases linearly with electrostatic doping. Our results pave the way for the
realisation of mesoscopic devices, where these two properties can be
manipulated on a local scale by means of top-gates
Magnetoresistance of proximity coupled Au wires
We report measurements of the magnetoresistance (MR) of narrow Au wires
coupled to a superconducting Al contact on one end, and a normal Au contact on
the other. The MR at low magnetic field is quadratic in , with a
characteristic field scale determined by phase coherent paths which
encompass not only the wire, but also the two contacts. is essentially
temperature independent at low temperatures, indicating that the area of the
phase coherent paths is not determined by the superconducting coherence length
in the normal metal, which is strongly temperature dependent at low
temperatures. We identify the relevant length scale as a combination of the
electron phase coherence length in the normal metal and the coherence
length in the superconductor
Hofstadter butterfly and integer quantum Hall effect in three dimensions
For a three-dimensional lattice in magnetic fields we have shown that the
hopping along the third direction, which normally tends to smear out the Landau
quantization gaps, can rather give rise to a fractal energy spectram akin to
Hofstadter's butterfly when a criterion, found here by mapping the problem to
two dimensions, is fulfilled by anisotropic (quasi-one-dimensional) systems. In
3D the angle of the magnetic field plays the role of the field intensity in 2D,
so that the butterfly can occur in much smaller fields. The mapping also
enables us to calculate the Hall conductivity, in terms of the topological
invariant in the Kohmoto-Halperin-Wu's formula, where each of is found to be quantized.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, RevTeX, uses epsf.sty,multicol.st
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