| Literature DB >> 27535694 |
K Yu Arutyunov1, J S Lehtinen2.
Abstract
Tunneling I-V characteristics between very narrow titanium nanowires and "massive" superconducting aluminum were measured. The clear trend was observed: the thinner the titanium electrode, the broader the singularity at eV = Δ1(Al) + Δ2(Ti). The phenomenon can be explained by broadening of the gap edge of the quasi-one-dimensional titanium channels due to quantum fluctuations of the order parameter modulus |Δ2|. The range of the nanowire diameters, where the effect is pronounced, correlates with dimensions where the phase fluctuations of the complex superconducting order parameter Δ = |Δ|e(iφ), the quantum phase slips, broadening the R(T) dependencies, have been observed.Entities:
Keywords: Quantum fluctuations; Quasi-one-dimensional superconductivity; Tunneling
Year: 2016 PMID: 27535694 PMCID: PMC4988958 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-016-1582-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1a SEM image of a typical Al-AlO -Ti tunnel junction with schematic of the electric circuit. b Schematic of the nanostructure layout. c R(T) dependencies of titanium nanowires with various effective diameters d eff
Fig. 2First derivative dV/dI characteristic: blow-up of the singularity at eV = Δ1(Al) + Δ2(Ti) of two S1IS2 junctions with two titanium electrodes of different effective diameters d eff equal to 31 and 36 nm (indicated in the inset). One can clearly see that for the thinnest titanium electrode, the absolute value of the mean gap is smaller and the broadening is larger
Fig. 3a Experimental (symbols) and simulated (line) for a typical gap-edge singularity eV = Δ1(Al) + Δ2(Ti). b Distribution of the titanium gap fluctuations used in fitting data from panel a: , δ|Δ 2| = 3 μeV