Proximity-induced superconductivity and quantum interference in topological crystalline insulator SnTe thin film devices


Abstract in English

Topological crystalline insulators represent a new state of matter, in which the electronic transport is governed by mirror-symmetry protected Dirac surface states. Due to the helical spin-polarization of these surface states, the proximity of topological crystalline matter to a nearby superconductor is predicted to induce unconventional superconductivity and thus to host Majorana physics. We report on the preparation and characterization of Nb-based superconducting quantum interference devices patterned on top of topological crystalline insulator SnTe thin films. The SnTe films show weak antilocalization and the weak links of the SQUID fully-gapped proximity induced superconductivity. Both properties give a coinciding coherence length of 120 nm. The SQUID oscillations induced by a magnetic field show 2$pi$ periodicity, possibly dominated by the bulk conductivity.

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