In their original formulation of superconductivity, the London brothers predicted the exponential suppression of an electrostatic field inside a superconductor over the so-called London penetration depth, λ. Despite a few experiments indicating hints of perturbation induced by electrostatic fields, no clue has been provided so far on the possibility to manipulate metallic superconductors via the field effect. Here, we report field-effect control of the supercurrent in all-metallic transistors made of different Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer superconducting thin films. At low temperature, our field-effect transistors show a monotonic decay of the critical current under increasing electrostatic field up to total quenching for gate voltage values as large as ±40 V in titanium-based devices. This bipolar field effect persists up to ~85% of the critical temperature (~0.41 K), and in the presence of sizable magnetic fields. A similar behaviour is observed in aluminium thin-film field-effect transistors. A phenomenological theory accounts for our observations, and points towards the interpretation in terms of an electric-field-induced perturbation propagating inside the superconducting film. In our understanding, this affects the pairing potential and quenches the supercurrent. These results could represent a groundbreaking asset for the realization of all-metallic superconducting field-effect electronics and leading-edge quantum information architectures.
Superconducting field-effect transitor (SuFET) and Josephson field-effect transistor (JoFET) technologies take advantage of electric-field-induced control of charge-carrier concentration to modulate the channel superconducting properties. Despite the fact that the field-effect is believed to be ineffective for superconducting metals, recent experiments showed electric-field-dependent modulation of the critical current ( I) in a fully metallic transistor. However, the grounding mechanism of this phenomenon is not completely understood. Here, we show the experimental realization of Ti-based Dayem bridge field-effect transistors (DB-FETs) able to control the I of the superconducting channel. Our easy fabrication process for DB-FETs show symmetric full suppression of I for applied critical gate voltages as low as V ≃ ±8 V at temperatures reaching about the 85% of the record critical temperature, T ≃ 550 mK, for titanium. The gate-independent T and normal-state resistance ( R) coupled with the increase of resistance in the superconducting state ( R) for gate voltages close to the critical value ( V) suggest the creation of field-effect induced metallic puddles in the superconducting sea. Our devices show extremely high values of transconductance (| g| ≃ 15 μA/V at V ≃ ±6.5 V) and variations of Josephson kinetic inductance ( L) with V of 2 orders of magnitude. Therefore, the DB-FET appears as an ideal candidate for the realization of superconducting electronics, superconducting qubits, and tunable interferometers as well as photon detectors.
In the last 60 years conventional solid and electrolyte gating allowed sizable modulations of the surface carrier concentration in metallic superconductors resulting in tuning their conductivity and changing their critical temperature. Recent conventional gating experiments on superconducting metal nano-structures showed full suppression of the critical current without variations of the normal state resistance and the critical temperature. These results still miss a microscopic explanation. In this article, we show a complete set of gating experiments on Ti-based superconducting Dayem bridges and a suggested classical thermodynamic model which seems to account for several of our experimental findings. In particular, zero-bias resistance and critical current IC measurements highlight the following: the suppression of IC with both polarities of gate voltage, the surface nature of the effect, the critical temperature independence from the electric field and the gate-induced growth of a sub-gap dissipative component. In addition, the temperature dependence of the Josephson critical current seems to show the transition from the ballistic Kulik-Omelyanchuck behavior to the Ambegaokar-Baratoff tunnel-like characteristic by increasing the electric field. Furthermore, the IC suppression persists in the presence of sizeable perpendicular-to-plane magnetic fields. We propose a classical thermodynamic model able to describe some of the experimental observations of the present and previous works. Above all, the model grabs the bipolar electric field induced suppression of IC and the emergence of a sub-gap dissipative component near full suppression of the supercurrent. Finally, applications employing the discussed effect are proposed.
A ferromagnetic insulator in contact with a superconductor is known to induce an exchange splitting of the singularity in the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) density of states (DoS). The magnitude of the splitting is proportional to the exchange field that penetrates into the superconductor to a depth comparable with the superconducting coherence length and which ranges in magnitude from a few to a few tens of tesla. We study this magnetic proximity effect in EuS/Al bilayers and show that the domain structure of the EuS affects the positions and the line shapes of the exchange-split BCS peaks. Remarkably, a clear exchange splitting is observed even in the unmagnetized state of the EuS layer, suggesting that the domain size of the EuS is comparable with the superconducting coherence length. Upon magnetizing the EuS layer, the splitting increases while the peaks change shape. Conductance measurements as a function of bias voltage at the lowest temperatures allowed us to relate the line shape of the split BCS DoS to the characteristic domain structure in the ultrathin EuS layer. These results pave the way to engineering triplet superconducting correlations at domain walls in EuS/Al bilayers. Furthermore, the hard gap and large splitting observed in our tunneling spectroscopy measurements make EuS/Al an excellent candidate for substituting strong magnetic fields in experiments studying Majorana bound states.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.