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Control of heat flux at small length scales is crucial for numerous solid-state devices and systems. In addition to the thermal management of information and communication devices the mastering of heat transfer channels down to the nanoscale also enable, e.g., new memory concepts, high sensitivity detectors and sensors, energy harvesters and compact solid-state refrigerators. Electronic coolers and thermal detectors for electromagnetic radiation, especially, rely on the maximization of electro-thermal response and blockade of phonon transport. In this work, we propose and demonstrate that efficient electro-thermal operation and phonon transfer blocking can be achieved in a single solid-state thermionic junction. Our experimental demonstration relies on suspended semiconductor-superconductor junctions where the electro-thermal response arises from the superconducting energy gap, and the phonon blocking naturally results from the transmission bottleneck at the junction. We suspend different size degenerately doped silicon chips (up to macroscopic scale) directly from the junctions and cool these by biasing the junctions. The electronic cooling operation characteristics are accompanied by measurement and analysis of the thermal resistance components in the structures indicating the operation principle of phonon blocking in the junctions.
Braiding operations are challenging to create topological quantum computers. It is unclear whether braiding operations can be executed with any materials. Although various calculations based on Majorana fermions show braiding possibilities, a braidin
We present evidence for the cooling of normal metal phonons by electron tunneling in a Superconductor - Normal metal - Superconductor tunnel junction. The normal metal electron temperature is extracted by comparing the device current-voltage characte
The superconducting proximity effect has played an important role in recent work searching for Majorana modes in thin semiconductor devices. Using transport measurements to quantify the changes in the semiconductor caused by the proximity effect prov
Many present and future applications of superconductivity would benefit from electrostatic control of carrier density and tunneling rates, the hallmark of semiconductor devices. One particularly exciting application is the realization of topological
We report on Andreev reflections at clean NbSe2-bilayer graphene junctions. The high transparency of the junction, which manifests as a large conductance enhancement of up to 1.8, enables us to see clear evidence of a proximity-induced superconductin