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Due to the ever increasing power and cooling requirements of large-scale computing and data facilities, there is a worldwide search for low-power alternatives to CMOS. One approach under consideration is superconducting computing based on single-flux-quantum logic. Unfortunately, there is not yet a low-power, high-density superconducting memory technology that is fully compatible with superconducting logic. We are working toward developing cryogenic memory based on Josephson junctions that contain two or more ferromagnetic (F) layers. Such junctions have been demonstrated to be programmable by changing the relative direction of the F layer magnetizations. There are at least two different types of such junctions -- those that carry the innate spin-singlet supercurrent associated with the conventional superconducting electrodes, and those that convert spin-singlet to spin-triplet supercurrent in the middle of the device. In this paper we compare the performance and requirements of the two kinds of junctions. Whereas the spin-singlet junctions need only two ferromagnetic layers to function, the spin-triplet junctions require at least three. In the devices demonstrated to date, the spin-singlet junctions have considerably larger critical current densities than the spin-triplet devices. On the other hand, the spin-triplet devices have less stringent constraints on the thicknesses of the F layers, which might be beneficial in large-scale manufacturing.
Josephson junctions containing two ferromagnetic layers are being considered for use in cryogenic memory. Our group recently demonstrated that the ground-state phase difference across such a junction with carefully chosen layer thicknesses could be c
We study the Andreev bound states in a Josephson junction between a singlet and a triplet superconductors. Because of the mismatch in the spin symmetries of pairing, the energies of the spin up and down quasiparticles are generally different. This re
The increased capabilities of coupling more and more materials through functional interfaces are paving the way to a series of exciting experiments and extremely advanced devices. Here we focus on the capability of magnetically inhomogeneous supercon
We demonstrate a Josephson junction with a weak link containing two ferromagnets, with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy and independent switching fields in which the critical current can be set by the mutual orientation of the two layers. Such pseud
Josephson junctions containing ferromagnetic materials have attracted intense interest both because of their unusual physical properties and because they have potential application for cryogenic memory. There are two ways to store information in such