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When a ferromagnet is placed in contact with a superconductor, owing to incompatible spin order, the Cooper pairs from the superconductor cannot survive more than one or two nanometers inside the ferromagnet. This is confirmed in the measurements of ferromagnetic nickel (Ni) nanowires contacted by superconducting niobium (Nb) leads. However, when a thin copper (Cu) buffer layer (3 nm, oxidized due to exposure to air) is inserted between the Nb electrodes and the Ni wire, the spatial extent of the superconducting proximity range is dramatically increased from 2 to a few tens of nanometers. Scanning transmission electron microscope images verify the existence of Cu oxides and the magnetization measurements of such a 3 nm oxidized Cu film on a SiO2/Si substrate and on Nb/SiO2/Si show evidence of ferromagnetism. One way to understand the long-range proximity effect in the Ni nanowire is that the oxidized Cu buffer layer with ferromagnetism facilitates the conversion of singlet superconductivity in Nb into triplet supercurrent along the Ni nanowires.
We report an experimental study of proximity effect-induced superconductivity in crystalline Cu and Co nanowires and a nanogranular Co nanowire structure in contact with a superconducting W floating electrode which we call inducer. The nanowires were
The long-range proximity effect in superconductor/ferromagnet (S/F) hybrid nano-structures is observed if singlet Cooper pairs from the superconductor are converted into triplet pairs which can diffuse into the fer- romagnet over large distances. It
Recent experiments have shown that proximity with high-temperature superconductors induces unconventional superconducting correlations in graphene. Here we demonstrate that those correlations propagate hundreds of nanometer, allowing for the unique o
We study the Josephson current through a ferromagnetic trilayer, both in the diffusive and clean limits. For colinear (parallel or antiparallel) magnetizations in the layers, the Josephson current is small due to short range proximity effect in super
We have measured the resistance vs. temperature of more than 20 superconducting nanowires with nominal widths ranging from 10 to 22 nm and lengths from 100 nm to 1050 nm. With decreasing cross-sectional areas, the wires display increasingly broad res