44,135 research outputs found

    Study of 0-π\pi phase transition in hybrid superconductor-InSb nanowire quantum dot devices

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    Hybrid superconductor-semiconducting nanowire devices provide an ideal platform to investigating novel intragap bound states, such as the Andreev bound states (ABSs), Yu-Shiba-Rusinov (YSR) states, and the Majorana bound states. The competition between Kondo correlations and superconductivity in Josephson quantum dot (QD) devices results in two different ground states and the occurrence of a 0-π\pi quantum phase transition. Here we report on transport measurements on hybrid superconductor-InSb nanowire QD devices with different device geometries. We demonstrate a realization of continuous gate-tunable ABSs with both 0-type levels and π\pi-type levels. This allow us to manipulate the transition between 0 and π\pi junction and explore charge transport and spectrum in the vicinity of the quantum phase transition regime. Furthermore, we find a coexistence of 0-type ABS and π\pi-type ABS in the same charge state. By measuring temperature and magnetic field evolution of the ABSs, the different natures of the two sets of ABSs are verified, being consistent with the scenario of phase transition between the singlet and doublet ground state. Our study provides insights into Andreev transport properties of hybrid superconductor-QD devices and sheds light on the crossover behavior of the subgap spectrum in the vicinity of 0-π\pi transition

    Low-field magnetotransport in graphene cavity devices

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    Confinement and edge structures are known to play significant roles in electronic and transport properties of two-dimensional materials. Here, we report on low-temperature magnetotransport measurements of lithographically patterned graphene cavity nanodevices. It is found that the evolution of the low-field magnetoconductance characteristics with varying carrier density exhibits different behaviors in graphene cavity and bulk graphene devices. In the graphene cavity devices, we have observed that intravalley scattering becomes dominant as the Fermi level gets close to the Dirac point. We associate this enhanced intravalley scattering to the effect of charge inhomogeneities and edge disorder in the confined graphene nanostructures. We have also observed that the dephasing rate of carriers in the cavity devices follows a parabolic temperature dependence, indicating that the direct Coulomb interaction scattering mechanism governs the dephasing at low temperatures. Our results demonstrate the importance of confinement in carrier transport in graphene nanostructure devices.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure

    A Bjorken sum rule for semileptonic Ωb\Omega_b decays to ground and excited charmed baryon states

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    We derive a Bjorken sum rule for semileptonic Ωb\Omega_b decays to ground and low-lying negative-parity excited charmed baryon states, in the heavy quark limit. We discuss the restriction from this sum rule on form factors and compare it with some models.Comment: 10 pages, RevTex, no figure, Alberta Thy--26--9

    Schottky barrier and contact resistance of InSb nanowire field effect transistors

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    Understanding of the electrical contact properties of semiconductor nanowire (NW) field effect transistors (FETs) plays a crucial role in employing semiconducting NWs as building blocks for future nanoelectronic devices and in the study of fundamental physics problems. Here, we report on a study of the contact properties of Ti/Au, a widely used contact metal combination, to individual InSb NWs via both two-probe and four-probe transport measurements. We show that a Schottky barrier of height ΦSB20 meV\Phi_{\rm{SB}}\sim20\ \rm{meV} is present at the metal-InSb NW interfaces and its effective height is gate tunable. The contact resistance (RcR_{\rm{c}}) in the InSb NWFETs is also analyzed by magnetotransport measurements at low temperatures. It is found that RcR_{\rm{c}} at on-state exhibits a pronounced magnetic field dependent feature, namely it is increased strongly with increasing magnetic field after an onset field BcB_{\rm{c}}. A qualitative picture that takes into account magnetic depopulation of subbands in the NWs is provided to explain the observation. Our results provide a solid experimental evidence for the presence of a Schottky barrier at Ti/Au-InSb NW interfaces and can be used as a basis for design and fabrication of novel InSb NW based nanoelectronic devices and quantum devices.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure

    Microstructural Evolution in Austenitic Stainless Steels Irradiated by Neutrons with Improved Control

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    Nucleation and growth of interstitial type dislocation loops were investigated by fusion neutron irradiation and fission neutron irradiations with improved control. The density of loops formed by both irradiations increased linearly with the fluence. The average size of loops also increased. The rate equation analysis showed that the loops were nucleated directly by the defect processes in a cascade zone, not by the reaction among the freely migrating point defects in the matrix. If the rate of loop formation is assumed to be directly proportional to the energy of a primary knock-on atom (PKA) produced by a neutron, the threshold energy of 80 keV and the rate of loop formation of 0.05 were obtained

    Formation of Long Single Quantum Dots in High Quality InSb Nanowires Grown by Molecular Beam Epitaxy

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    We report on realization and transport spectroscopy study of single quantum dots (QDs) made from InSb nanowires grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). The nanowires employed are 50-80 nm in diameter and the QDs are defined in the nanowires between the source and drain contacts on a Si/SiO2_2 substrate. We show that highly tunable QD devices can be realized with the MBE-grown InSb nanowires and the gate-to-dot capacitance extracted in the many-electron regimes is scaled linearly with the longitudinal dot size, demonstrating that the devices are of single InSb nanowire QDs even with a longitudinal size of ~700 nm. In the few-electron regime, the quantum levels in the QDs are resolved and the Land\'e g-factors extracted for the quantum levels from the magnetotransport measurements are found to be strongly level-dependent and fluctuated in a range of 18-48. A spin-orbit coupling strength is extracted from the magnetic field evolutions of a ground state and its neighboring excited state in an InSb nanowire QD and is on the order of ~300 μ\mueV. Our results establish that the MBE-grown InSb nanowires are of high crystal quality and are promising for the use in constructing novel quantum devices, such as entangled spin qubits, one-dimensional Wigner crystals and topological quantum computing devices.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
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