The study of superconductor/ferromagnet interfaces has generated a great interest in the last decades, leading to the observation of equal spin spin triplet supercurrent and 0 − π transitions in Josephson junctions where two superconductors are separated by an itinerant ferromagnet. Recently, spin-filter Josephson junctions with ferromagnetic barriers have shown unique transport properties, when compared to standard metallic ferromagnetic junctions, due to the intrinsically non-dissipative nature of the tunneling process. Here we present the first extensive characterization of spin polarized Josephson junctions down to 0.3 K, and the first evidence of an incomplete 0 − π transition in highly spin polarized tunnel ferromagnetic junctions. Experimental data are consistent with a progressive enhancement of the magnetic activity with the increase of the barrier thickness, as neatly captured by the simplest theoretical approach including a non uniform exchange field. For very long junctions, unconventional magnetic activity of the barrier points to the presence of spin-triplet correlations.The interaction of superconductors with materials other than simple insulators or metals has made accessible a series of conceptually new challenges. Of particular interest to this work, Josephson junctions (JJs) with ferromagnetic materials separating two superconductors have been extensively characterized over the last decade. The simultaneous presence of the macroscopic phase coherence of superconductors and the exchange interaction of ferromagnetic materials is indeed of great value in the study of fundamental questions on possible pairing states in superconductors [1,2], demonstrating the presence of spin-polarized triplet supercurrents [3][4][5][6][7][8][9], and for potential applications in a wide range of cutting edge areas, such as spintronics [10,11], memory applications for high performance computing [12][13][14][15][16][17][18] and circuit components such as π shifters and phase qubits [19][20][21][22][23]. A playground where different forms of order can cooperate and interfere is of considerable value for inspiring other fields of physics [1,2].The existing literature focuses mostly on metallic superconductor/ferromagnet/superconductor (SFS) junctions, where the evidence of long-range spin triplet correlations is well established [3][4][5][6][7][8]: in the presence of equalspin Cooper pairs, the magnitude of the critical current I C decays much more slowly with magnetic barrier thickness than expected for standard singlet supercurrents [4,5]. In fact, spin-polarized Cooper pairs can survive at much longer length scales when compared to opposite spin Cooper pairs, and are practically immune to depairing induced by the presence of an exchange field [1,2]. Such junctions, together with superconducting spin valve devices, are likely to be the building blocks for future spintronic devices [11]. While metallic SFS junctions have been extensively characterized, the physics of ferromagnetic junctions with insulating barriers, l...
We report on measurements of the switching current distributions on two-dimensional superconducting NbTiN strips that are 5 nm thick and 80 nm wide. We observe that the width of the switching current distributions has a non-monotonous temperature dependence, where it is constant at the lowest temperatures up to about 1.5 K, after which it increases with temperature until 2.2 K. Above 2.5 K any increase in temperature decreases the distribution width which at 4.0 K is smaller than half the width observed at 0.3 K. By using a careful analysis of the higher order moments of the switching distribution, we show that this temperature dependence is caused by switching due to multiple fluctuations. We also find that the onset of switching by multiple events causes the current dependence of the switching rate to develop a characteristic deviation from a pure exponential increase, that becomes more pronounced at higher temperatures, due to the inclusion of higher order terms.
In this work we give a characterization of the RF effect of memory switching on Nb-Al/AlOx-(Nb)-Pd0.99Fe0.01-Nb Josephson junctions as a function of magnetic field pulse amplitude and duration, alongside with an electrodynamical characterization of such junctions, in comparison with standard Nb-Al/AlOx-Nb tunnel junctions. The use of microwaves to tune the switching parameters of magnetic Josephson junctions is a step in the development of novel addressing schemes aimed at improving the performances of superconducting memories.
We test the effect of an external RF field on the switching processes of magnetic Josephson junctions (MJJs) suitable for the realization of fast, scalable cryogenic memories compatible with Single Flux Quantum logic. We show that the combined application of microwaves and magnetic field pulses can improve the performances of the device, increasing the separation between the critical current levels corresponding to logical '0' and '1'. The enhancement of the current level separation can be as high as 80% using an optimal set of parameters. We demonstrate that external RF fields can be used as an additional tool to manipulate the memory states, and we expect that this approach may lead to the development of new methods of selecting MJJs and manipulating their states in memory arrays for various applications.
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