5 research outputs found
Enhancing the excitation gap of a quantum-dot-based Kitaev chain
Connecting double quantum dots via a semiconductor-superconductor hybrid
segment offers a platform for creating a two-site Kitaev chain that hosts a
pair of "poor man's Majoranas" at a finely tuned sweet spot. However, the
effective couplings, which are mediated by Andreev bound states in the hybrid,
are generally weak in the tunneling regime. As a consequence, the excitation
gap is limited in size, presenting a formidable challenge for using this
platform to demonstrate non-Abelian statistics of Majoranas and realizing
error-resilient topological quantum computing. In this work, we systematically
study the effects of increasing the coupling between the dot and the hybrid
segment. In particular, the proximity effect transforms the dot orbitals into
Yu-Shiba-Rusinov states, forming a new spinless fermion basis for a Kitaev
chain, and we derive a theory for their effective coupling. As the coupling
strength between the dots and the hybrid segment increases, we find a
significant enhancement of the excitation gap and reduced sensitivity to local
perturbations. Although the hybridization of the Majorana wave function with
the central Andreev bound states increases strongly with increasing coupling,
the overlap of Majorana modes on the outer dots remains small, which is a
prerequisite for potential qubit experiments. We discuss how the
strong-coupling regime shows in experimentally accessible quantities, such as
the local and non-local conductance, and provide a protocol for tuning a
double-dot system into a sweet spot with a large excitation gap.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Crossed Andreev reflection and elastic co-tunneling in a three-site Kitaev chain nanowire device
The formation of a topological superconducting phase in a quantum-dot-based
Kitaev chain requires nearest neighbor crossed Andreev reflection and elastic
co-tunneling. Here we report on a hybrid InSb nanowire in a three-site Kitaev
chain geometry - the smallest system with well-defined bulk and edge - where
two superconductor-semiconductor hybrids separate three quantum dots. We
demonstrate pairwise crossed Andreev reflection and elastic co-tunneling
between both pairs of neighboring dots and show sequential tunneling processes
involving all three quantum dots. These results are the next step towards the
realization of topological superconductivity in long Kitaev chain devices with
many coupled quantum dots
Controlled crossed Andreev reflection and elastic co-tunneling mediated by Andreev bound states
A short superconducting segment can couple attached quantum dots via elastic
co-tunneling (ECT) and crossed Andreev reflection (CAR). Such coupled quantum
dots can host Majorana bound states provided that the ratio between CAR and ECT
can be controlled. Metallic superconductors have so far been shown to mediate
such tunneling phenomena, albeit with limited tunability. Here we show that
Andreev bound states formed in semiconductor-superconductor heterostructures
can mediate CAR and ECT over mesoscopic length scales. Andreev bound states
possess both an electron and a hole component, giving rise to an intricate
interference phenomenon that allows us to tune the ratio between CAR and ECT
deterministically. We further show that the combination of intrinsic spin-orbit
coupling in InSb nanowires and an applied magnetic field provides another
efficient knob to tune the ratio between ECT and CAR and optimize the amount of
coupling between neighboring quantum dots
Singlet and triplet Cooper pair splitting in superconducting-semiconducting hybrid nanowires
In most naturally occurring superconductors, electrons with opposite spins
are paired up to form Cooper pairs. This includes both conventional -wave
superconductors such as aluminum as well as high-, -wave
superconductors. Materials with intrinsic -wave superconductivity, hosting
Cooper pairs made of equal-spin electrons, have not been conclusively
identified, nor synthesized, despite promising progress. Instead, engineered
platforms where -wave superconductors are brought into contact with magnetic
materials have shown convincing signatures of equal-spin pairing. Here, we
directly measure equal-spin pairing, proximity-induced from an -wave
superconductor into a semiconducting nanowire with strong spin-orbit
interaction. We demonstrate such pairing using spin-selective quantum dots by
showing that breaking a Cooper pair can result in two electrons with equal spin
polarization. Our results demonstrate controllable detection of singlet and
triplet pairing in the proximitized nanowire. Achieving such triplet pairing in
a sequence of quantum dots will be required for realizing an artificial Kitaev
chain