Tunable Klein-like tunnelling of high-temperature superconducting pairs into graphene

Abstract

Superconductivity can be induced in a normal material via the 'leakage' of superconducting pairs of charge carriers from an adjacent superconductor. This so-called proximity effect is markedly influenced by graphene's unique electronic structure, both in fundamental and technologically relevant ways. These include an unconventional form1,2 of the 'leakage' mechanism- the Andreev reflection3-and the potential of supercurrent modulation through electrical gating4. Despite the interest of high-temperature superconductors in that context5,6, realizations have been exclusively based on low-temperature ones. Here we demonstrate a gate-tunable, high-temperature superconducting proximity effect in graphene. Notably, gating effects result fromthe perfect transmission of superconducting pairs across an energy barrier-a form of Klein tunnelling7,8, up to nowobserved only for non-superconducting carriers9,10- and quantum interferences controlled by graphene doping. Interestingly, we find that this type of interference becomesdominant without the need of ultraclean graphene, in stark contrast to the case of low-temperature superconductors11. These results pave the way to a new class of tunable, high-temperature Josephson devices based on large-scale graphene

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