ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Supercurrent-induced temperature gradient across a nonequilibrium SNS Josephson junction

70   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Michael Crosser
 تاريخ النشر 2006
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Using tunneling spectroscopy, we have measured the local electron energy distribution function in the normal part of a superconductor-normal metal-superconductor (SNS) Josephson junction containing an extra lead to a normal reservoir. In the presence of simultaneous supercurrent and injected quasiparticle current, the distribution function exhibits a sharp feature at very low energy. The feature is odd in energy, and odd under reversal of either the supercurrent or the quasiparticle current direction. The feature represents an effective temperature gradient across the SNS Josephson junction that is controllable by the supercurrent.


قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Transport is called nonreciprocal when not only the sign, but also the absolute value of the current, depends on the polarity of the applied voltage. It requires simultaneously broken inversion and time-reversal symmetries, e.g., by the interplay of spin-orbit coupling and magnetic field. So far, observation of nonreciprocity was always tied to resistivity, and dissipationless nonreciprocal circuit elements were elusive. Here, we engineer fully superconducting nonreciprocal devices based on highly-transparent Josephson junctions fabricated on InAs quantum wells. We demonstrate supercurrent rectification far below the transition temperature. By measuring Josephson inductance, we can link nonreciprocal supercurrent to the asymmetry of the current-phase relation, and directly derive the supercurrent magnetochiral anisotropy coefficient for the first time. A semi-quantitative model well explains the main features of our experimental data. Nonreciprocal Josephson junctions have the potential to become for superconducting circuits what $pn$-junctions are for traditional electronics, opening the way to novel nondissipative circuit elements.
The fractional Josephson effect is known to be a characteristic phenomenon of topological Josephson junctions hosting Majorana zero modes (MZMs), where the Josephson current has a $4pi$ (rather than a $2pi$) periodicity in the phase difference betwee n the two topological superconductors. We introduce a one-dimensional model of a topological superconductor/normal-metal/superconductor (SNS) junction with the normal-metal (N) region of finite length, which is intermediate regime between the short- and long-junction limits. Assuming weak tunneling at the SN interfaces, we investigate resonance and finite-size effects on the fractional Josephson effect due to the existence of several discrete energy levels in the N region in which wavefunctions have oscillating nodal structure. Through careful analysis of the sign change in the transmission amplitudes through the junction and the fermion parity of the two MZMs, we find that the fractional Josephson current is proportional to the parity of total fermion numbers including both filled normal levels and two MZMs. Furthermore, we elucidate drastic enhancement of the Josephson current due to the resonance between a discrete level in the N region and MZMs.
A Josephson supercurrent has been induced into the three-dimensional topological insulator Bi1.5Sb0.5Te1.7Se1.3. We show that the transport in Bi1.5Sb0.5Te1.7Se1.3 exfoliated flakes is dominated by surface states and that the bulk conductivity can be neglected at the temperatures where we study the proximity induced superconductivity. We prepared Josephson junctions with widths in the order of 40 nm and lengths in the order of 50 to 80 nm on several Bi1.5Sb0.5Te1.7Se1.3 flakes and measured down to 30 mK. The Fraunhofer patterns unequivocally reveal that the supercurrent is a Josephson supercurrent. The measured critical currents are reproducibly observed on different devices and upon multiple cooldowns, and the critical current dependence on temperature as well as magnetic field can be well explained by diffusive transport models and geometric effects.
$ $The critical current of a Josephson junction is an oscillatory function of the enclosed magnetic flux $Phi$, because of quantum interference modulated with periodicity $h/2e$. We calculate these Fraunhofer oscillations in a two-dimensional (2D) ba llistic superconductor--normal-metal--superconductor (SNS) junction. For a Fermi circle the amplitude of the oscillations decays as $1/Phi$ or faster. If the Fermi circle is strongly warped, as it is on a square lattice near the band center, we find that the amplitude decays slower $propto 1/sqrtPhi$ when the magnetic length $l_m=sqrt{hbar/eB}$ drops below the separation $L$ of the NS interfaces. The crossover to the slow decay of the critical current is accompanied by the appearance of a 2D array of current vortices and antivortices in the normal region, which form a bipartite rectangular lattice with lattice constant $simeq l_m^2/L$. The 2D lattice vanishes for a circular Fermi surface, when only the usual single row of Josephson vortices remains.
We investigate the Josephson critical current $I_c(Phi)$ of a wide superconductor-normal metal-superconductor (SNS) junction as a function of the magnetic flux $Phi$ threading it. Electronic trajectories reflected from the side edges alter the functi on $I_c(Phi)$ as compared to the conventional Fraunhofer-type dependence. At weak magnetic fields, $Blesssim Phi_0/d^2$, the edge effect lifts zeros in $I_c(Phi)$ and gradually shifts the minima of that function toward half-integer multiples of the flux quantum. At $B>Phi_0/d^2$, the edge effect leads to an accelerated decay of the critical current $I_c(Phi)$ with increasing $Phi$. At larger fields, eventually, the system is expected to cross into a regime of classical mesoscopic fluctuations that is specific for wide ballistic SNS junctions with rough edges.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا