157 research outputs found
Proximity-induced superconductivity in a 2D Kondo lattice of an f-electron-based surface alloy
Realizing hybrids of low-dimensional Kondo lattices and superconducting
substrates leads to fascinating platforms for studying the exciting physics of
strongly correlated electron systems with induced superconducting pairing.
Here, we report a scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy study of a new
type of two-dimensional (2D) La-Ce alloy grown epitaxially on a superconducting
Re(0001) substrate. We observe the characteristic spectroscopic signature of a
hybridization gap evidencing the coherent spin screening in the 2D Kondo
lattice realized by the ultrathin La-Ce alloy film on normal conducting
Re(0001). Upon lowering the temperature below the critical temperature of
rhenium, a superconducting gap is induced with an in-gap Shiba band arising
from the interaction of residual unscreened magnetic moments with the
superconducting substrate. A positive correlation between the Kondo
hybridization gap and the binding energy of the subgap Shiba band maximum is
found. Our results open up a promising route toward the design of artificial
superconducting Kondo and heavy fermion systems.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, supplemental material
Atomic-Scale Interface Engineering of Majorana Edge Modes in a 2D Magnet-Superconductor Hybrid System
Topological superconductors are predicted to harbor exotic boundary states -
Majorana zero-energy modes - whose non-Abelian braiding statistics present a
new paradigm for the realization of topological quantum computing. Using
low-temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS), we here report on the
direct real-space visualization of chiral Majorana edge states in a monolayer
topological superconductor, a prototypical magnet-superconductor hybrid system
comprised of nano-scale Fe islands of monoatomic height on a
Re(0001)-O(21) surface. In particular, we demonstrate that interface
engineering by an atomically thin oxide layer is crucial for driving the hybrid
system into a topologically non-trivial state as confirmed by theoretical
calculations of the topological invariant, the Chern number.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
FiFo: Fishbone Forwarding in Massive IoT Networks
Massive Internet of Things (IoT) networks have a wide range of applications,
including but not limited to the rapid delivery of emergency and disaster
messages. Although various benchmark algorithms have been developed to date for
message delivery in such applications, they pose several practical challenges
such as insufficient network coverage and/or highly redundant transmissions to
expand the coverage area, resulting in considerable energy consumption for each
IoT device. To overcome this problem, we first characterize a new performance
metric, forwarding efficiency, which is defined as the ratio of the coverage
probability to the average number of transmissions per device, to evaluate the
data dissemination performance more appropriately. Then, we propose a novel and
effective forwarding method, fishbone forwarding (FiFo), which aims to improve
the forwarding efficiency with acceptable computational complexity. Our FiFo
method completes two tasks: 1) it clusters devices based on the unweighted pair
group method with the arithmetic average; and 2) it creates the main axis and
sub axes of each cluster using both the expectation-maximization algorithm for
the Gaussian mixture model and principal component analysis. We demonstrate the
superiority of FiFo by using a real-world dataset. Through intensive and
comprehensive simulations, we show that the proposed FiFo method outperforms
benchmark algorithms in terms of the forwarding efficiency.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, 5 tables; to appear in the IEEE Internet of
Things Journal (Please cite our journal version that will appear in an
upcoming issue.
Long-range focusing of magnetic bound states in superconducting lanthanum
Quantum mechanical systems with long-range interactions between quasiparticles provide a promising platform for coherent quantum information technology. Superconductors are a natural choice for solid-state based quantum devices, while magnetic impurities inside superconductors give rise to quasiparticle excitations of broken Cooper pairs that provide characteristic information about the host superconductor. Here, we reveal that magnetic impurities embedded below a superconducting La(0001) surface interact via quasiparticles extending to very large distances, up to several tens of nanometers. Using low-temperature scanning probe techniques, we observe the corresponding anisotropic and giant oscillations in the LDOS. Theoretical calculations indicate that the quasi-two-dimensional surface states with their strongly anisotropic Fermi surface play a crucial role for the focusing and long-range extension of the magnetic bound states. The quasiparticle focusing mechanism should facilitate the design of versatile magnetic structures with tunable and directed magnetic interactions over large distances, thereby paving the way toward the design of low-dimensional magnet-superconductor hybrid systems exhibiting topologically non-trivial quantum states as possible elements of quantum computation schemes based on Majorana quasi particles
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