101 research outputs found
Interference of two electrons entering a superconductor
The subgap conductivity of a normal-superconductor (NS) tunnel junction is
thought to be due to tunneling of two electrons. There is a strong interference
between these two electrons, originating from the spatial phase coherence in
the normal metal at a mesoscopic length scale and the intrinsic coherence of
the superconductor.
We evaluated the interference effect on the transport through an NS junction.
We propose the layouts to observe drastic Aharonov-Bohm and Josephson
effects.Comment: 8 pages REVTex, [PostScript] figures upon reques
Back gating of a two-dimensional hole gas in a SiGe quantum well
A device comprising a low-resistivity, n-type, Si substrate as a back gate to a p-type (boron), remote-doped, SiGe quantum well has been fabricated and characterized. Reverse and forward voltage biasing of the gate with respect to the two-dimensional hole gas in the quantum well allows the density of holes to be varied from 8 × 1011 cm–2 down to a measurement-limited value of 4 × 1011 cm–2. This device is used to demonstrate the evolution with decreasing carrier density of a re-entrant insulator state between the integer quantum Hall effect states with filling factors 1 and 3
Conductance of a junction between a normal metal and a Berezinskii superconductor
The conductance of a junction between a normal metal and a superconductor
having the symmetry proposed by Berezinskii is studied theoretically. The main
feature of this symmetry is the odd frequency dependence of the anomalous Green
function, which makes possible the s-wave triplet superconducting state (the
Berezinskii superconductor). The Andreev reflection (which links positive and
negative energies) is sensitive to the energetic symmetry; as a result, the
conductance of the junction involving the Berezinskii superconductor is
qualitatively different from the case of a conventional superconductor.
Experimentally, the obtained results can be employed to test the possibility of
the Berezinskii superconductivity proposed for NaCoO and to identify
the odd-omega component predicted for superconductor-ferromagnet junctions.Comment: 5 pages (including 3 EPS figures
Theory of Andreev reflection in a junction with a strongly disordered semiconductor
We study the conduction of a {\sl N~-~Sm~-~S} junction, where {\sl Sm} is a
strongly disordered semiconductor. The differential conductance of this
{\sl N~-~Sm~-~S} structure is predicted to have a sharp peak at . Unlike
the case of a weakly disordered system, this feature persists even in the
absence of an additional (Schottky) barrier on the boundary. The zero-bias
conductance of such a junction is smaller only by a numerical factor
than the conductance in the normal state . Implications for experiments on
gated heterostructures with superconducting leads are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Rapid Communication section of Phys.
Rev.
Scaling Theory of Conduction Through a Normal-Superconductor Microbridge
The length dependence is computed of the resistance of a disordered
normal-metal wire attached to a superconductor. The scaling of the transmission
eigenvalue distribution with length is obtained exactly in the metallic limit,
by a transformation onto the isobaric flow of a two-dimensional ideal fluid.
The resistance has a minimum for lengths near l/Gamma, with l the mean free
path and Gamma the transmittance of the superconductor interface.Comment: 8 pages, REVTeX-3.0, 3 postscript figures appended as self-extracting
archive, INLO-PUB-94031
Semiconductor High-Energy Radiation Scintillation Detector
We propose a new scintillation-type detector in which high-energy radiation
produces electron-hole pairs in a direct-gap semiconductor material that
subsequently recombine producing infrared light to be registered by a
photo-detector. The key issue is how to make the semiconductor essentially
transparent to its own infrared light, so that photons generated deep inside
the semiconductor could reach its surface without tangible attenuation. We
discuss two ways to accomplish this, one based on doping the semiconductor with
shallow impurities of one polarity type, preferably donors, the other by
heterostructure bandgap engineering. The proposed semiconductor scintillator
combines the best properties of currently existing radiation detectors and can
be used for both simple radiation monitoring, like a Geiger counter, and for
high-resolution spectrography of the high-energy radiation. The most important
advantage of the proposed detector is its fast response time, about 1 ns,
essentially limited only by the recombination time of minority carriers.
Notably, the fast response comes without any degradation in brightness. When
the scintillator is implemented in a qualified semiconductor material (such as
InP or GaAs), the photo-detector and associated circuits can be epitaxially
integrated on the scintillator slab and the structure can be stacked-up to
achieve virtually any desired absorption capability
Proximity effects and Andreev reflection in mesoscopic SNS junction with perfect NS interfaces
Low temperature transport measurements on superconducting film - normal metal
wire - superconducting film (SNS) junctions fabricated on the basis of 6 nm
thick superconducting polycrystalline PtSi films are reported. The structures
with the normal metal wires of two different lengths L=1.5 m and L=6m
and the same widths W=0.3m are studied. Zero bias resistance dip related
to pair current proximity effect is observed for all junctions whereas the
subharmonic energy gap structure originating from phase coherent multiple
Andreev reflections have occurs only in the SNS junctions with short wires.Comment: ReVTex, 4 pages, 4 eps figures include
Sub-gap conductance in ferromagnetic-superconducting mesoscopic structures
We study the sub-gap conductance of a ferromagnetic mesoscopic region
attached to a ferromagnetic and a superconducting electrode by means of tunnel
junctions. In the absence of the exchange field, the ratio of the two tunnel junction resistances determines the behaviour of
the sub-gap conductance which possesses a zero-bias peak for and for
a peak at finite voltage. We show that the inclusion of the exchange
field leads to a peak splitting for , while it shifts the zero-bias
anomaly to finite voltages for .Comment: 5 pages revte
Suppression and enhancement of the critical current in multiterminal S/N/S mesoscopic structures
We analyse the measured critical current in a mesoscopic
4-terminal S/N/S structure. The current through the S/N interface is shown to
consist not only of the Josephson component but also a
phase-coherent part of the subgap current. The current
is determined by the both components and and depends
in a nonmonotonic way on the voltage between superconductors and normal
reservoirs reaching a maximum at . The obtained theoretical
resultas are in qualitative agreement with recent experimental data.Comment: 4 page, 3 figures. To be puplished in PRB Rapid co
Competition between electronic cooling and Andreev dissipation in a superconducting micro-cooler
We discuss very low temperature experiments on superconducting micro-coolers
made of a double Normal metal - Insulator - Superconductor junction. We
investigate with a high resolution the differential conductance of the
micro-cooler as well as of additional probe junctions. There is an explicit
crossover between the single quasi-particle current and the phase-coherent
Andreev current. We establish a thermal model by considering the thermal
contribution due to the Andreev current. The related increase of the electron
temperature is discussed, including the influence of several parameters like
the phase-coherence length or the tunnel junction transparency
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