991 research outputs found

    Highly-sensitive superconducting quantum interference proximity transistor

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    We report the design and implementation of a high-performance superconducting quantum interference proximity transistor (SQUIPT) based on aluminum-copper (Al-Cu) technology. With the adoption of a thin and short copper nanowire we demostrate full phase-driven modulation of the proximity-induced minigap in the normal metal density of states. Under optimal bias we record unprecedently high flux-to-voltage (up to 3 mV/Φ0\Phi_0) and flux-to-current (exceeding 100 nA/Φ0\Phi_0) transfer function values at sub-Kelvin temperatures, where Φ0\Phi_0 is the flux quantum. The best magnetic flux resolution (as low as 500 nΦ0/Hz\Phi_0/\sqrt{Hz} at 240 mK, being limited by the room temperature pre-amplification stage) is reached under fixed current bias. These figures of merit combined with ultra-low power dissipation and micrometer-size dimensions make this mesoscopic interferometer attractive for low-temperature applications such as the investigation of the magnetization of small spin populations.Comment: 7 pages, 5 color figure

    Photonic heat conduction in Josephson-coupled Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer superconductors

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    We investigate the photon-mediated heat flow between two Josephson-coupled Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) superconductors. We demonstrate that in standard low temperature experiments involving temperature-biased superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs), this radiative contribution is negligible if compared to the direct galvanic one, but it largely exceeds the heat exchanged between electrons and the lattice phonons. The corresponding thermal conductance is found to be several orders of magnitude smaller, for real experiments setup parameters, than the universal quantum of thermal conductance, kappa_0(T)=pi k_B^2T/6hbar.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Ferromagnetic insulator-based superconducting junctions as sensitive electron thermometers

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    We present an exhaustive theoretical analysis of charge and thermoelectric transport in a normal metal-ferromagnetic insulator-superconductor (NFIS) junction, and explore the possibility of its use as a sensitive thermometer. We investigated the transfer functions and the intrinsic noise performance for different measurement configurations. A common feature of all configurations is that the best temperature noise performance is obtained in the non-linear temperature regime for a structure based on an europium chalcogenide ferromagnetic insulator in contact with a superconducting Al film structure. For an open-circuit configuration, although the maximal intrinsic temperature sensitivity can achieve 1010nKHz−1/2^{-1/2}, a realistic amplifying chain will reduce the sensitivity up to 1010μ\muKHz−1/2^{-1/2}. To overcome this limitation we propose a measurement scheme in a closed-circuit configuration based on state-of-art SQUID detection technology in an inductive setup. In such a case we show that temperature noise can be as low as 3535nKHz−1/2^{-1/2}. We also discuss a temperature-to-frequency converter where the obtained thermo-voltage developed over a Josephson junction operated in the dissipative regime is converted into a high-frequency signal. We predict that the structure can generate frequencies up to ∼120\sim 120GHz, and transfer functions up to 200200GHz/K at around ∼1\sim 1K. If operated as electron thermometer, the device may provide temperature noise lower than 3535nKHz−1/2^{-1/2} thereby being potentially attractive for radiation sensing applications.Comment: 11 pages, 10 color figure

    Ultra-efficient Cooling in Ferromagnet-Superconductor Microrefrigerators

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    A promising scheme for electron microrefrigeration based on ferromagnet-superconductor contacts is presented. In this setup, cooling power densities up to 600 nW/μ\mum2^2 can be achieved leading to electronic temperature reductions largely exceeding those obtained with existing superconductor-normal metal tunnel contacts. Half-metallic CrO2_2/Al bilayers are indicated as ideal candidates for the implementation of the device.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter

    A normal metal tunnel-junction heat diode

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    We propose a low-temperature thermal rectifier consisting of a chain of three tunnel-coupled normal metal electrodes. We show that a large heat rectification is achievable if the thermal symmetry of the structure is broken and the central island can release energy to the phonon bath. The performance of the device is theoretically analyzed and, under the appropriate conditions, temperature differences up to ∼\sim 200 mK between the forward and reverse thermal bias configurations are obtained below 1 K, corresponding to a rectification ratio R∼\mathcal{R} \sim 2000. The simplicity intrinsic to its design joined with the insensitivity to magnetic fields make our device potentially attractive as a fundamental building block in solid-state thermal nanocircuits and in general-purpose cryogenic electronic applications requiring energy management.Comment: 4.5 pages, 4 color figure

    Fully-Balanced Heat Interferometer

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    A tunable and balanced heat interferometer is proposed and analyzed. The device consists of two superconductors linked together to form a double-loop interrupted by three Josephson junctions coupled in parallel. Both superconductors are held at different temperatures allowing the heat currents flowing through the structure to interfere. As we show here, thermal transport is coherently modulated through the application of a magnetic flux. Furthermore, such modulation can be tailored at will through the application of an extra control flux. In addition we show that, provided a proper choice of the system parameters, a fully balanced interferometer is obtained. The latter means that the phase-coherent part of heat current can be controlled to the extent of being fully suppressed. Such a device allows for a versatile operation appearing, therefore, as an attractive key to the onset of low-temperature coherent caloritronic circuits

    Majorana bound states in hybrid 2D Josephson junctions with ferromagnetic insulators

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    We consider a Josephson junction consisting of superconductor/ferromagnetic insulator (S/FI) bilayers as electrodes which proximizes a nearby 2D electron gas. By starting from a generic Josephson hybrid planar setup we present an exhaustive analysis of the the interplay between the superconducting and magnetic proximity effects and the conditions under which the structure undergoes transitions to a non-trivial topological phase. We address the 2D bound state problem using a general transfer matrix approach that reduces the problem to an effective 1D Hamiltonian. This allows for straightforward study of topological properties in different symmetry classes. As an example we consider a narrow channel coupled with multiple ferromagnetic superconducting fingers, and discuss how the Majorana bound states can be spatially controlled by tuning the superconducting phases. Following our approach we also show the energy spectrum, the free energy and finally the multiterminal Josephson current of the setup.Comment: 8 pages; 5 figure

    Thermal rectification of electrons in hybrid normal metal-superconductor nanojunctions

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    We theoretically investigate heat transport in hybrid normal metal-superconductor (NS) nanojunctions focusing on the effect of thermal rectification. We show that the heat diode effect in the junction strongly depends on the transmissivity and the nature of the NS contact. Thermal rectification efficiency can reach up to 123% for a fully-transmissive ballistic junction and up to 84% in diffusive NS contacts. Both values exceed the rectification efficiency of a NIS tunnel junction (I stands for an insulator) by a factor close to 5 and 3, respectively. Furthermore, we show that for NS point-contacts with low transmissivity, inversion of the heat diode effect can take place. Our results could prove useful for tailoring heat management at the nanoscale, and for mastering thermal flux propagation in low-temperature caloritronic nanocircuitry.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 color figure

    Cold electron Josephson transistor

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    A superconductor-normal metal-superconductor mesoscopic Josephson junction has been realized in which the critical current is tuned through normal current injection using a symmetric electron cooler directly connected to the weak link. Both enhancement of the critical current by more than a factor of two, and supercurrent suppression have been achieved by varying the cooler bias. Furthermore, this transistor-like device demonstrates large current gain ∼\sim20) and low power dissipation
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