Superconductivity from a melted insulator in Josephson junction arrays.

ORAL

Abstract

Arrays of Josephson junctions are governed by a competition between superconductivity and repulsive Coulomb interactions, and are expected to exhibit diverging low-temperature resistance when interactions exceed a critical level. Here we report a study of the transport and microwave response of Josephson arrays with interactions exceeding this level. Contrary to expectations, we observe that the array resistance drops dramatically as the temperature is decreased—reminiscent of superconducting behaviour—and then saturates at low temperature. Applying a magnetic field, we eventually observe a transition to a highly resistive regime. These observations can be understood within a theoretical picture that accounts for the effect of thermal fluctuations on the insulating phase. On the basis of the agreement between experiment and theory, we suggest that apparent superconductivity in our Josephson arrays arises from melting the zero-temperature insulator.

* Work supported by the Austrian FWF grant P33692-N (Soham Mukhopadhyay, Jorden Senior and Andrew P. Higginbotham), the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 754411 (Jorden Senior) and a NOMIS foundation research grant (Johannes M. Fink and Andrew P. Higginbotham).

Publication: Averin, D.V. Superconducting arrays offer resistance. Nat. Phys. (2023).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-023-02192-3

Presenters

  • Soham Mukhopadhyay

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

Authors

  • Soham Mukhopadhyay

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Jorden Senior

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Jaime Saez-Mollejo

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Denise Puglia

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Martin Zemlicka

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Johannes M Fink

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Andrew P Higginbotham

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria