Hard superconducting gap in PbTe nanowires
ORAL
Abstract
Semiconductor nanowires coupled to a superconductor provide a powerful testbed for quantum device physics such as Majorana zero modes and gate-tunable hybrid qubits. The performance of these quantum devices heavily relies on the quality of the induced superconducting gap. A hard gap, evident as vanishing subgap conductance in tunneling spectroscopy, is both necessary and desired. Previously, a hard gap has been achieved and extensively studied in III-V semiconductor nanowires (InAs and InSb). In this study, we present the observation of a hard superconducting gap in PbTe nanowires coupled to a superconductor Pb. The gap size is ∼ 1 meV (maximally 1.3 meV in one device). Additionally, subgap Andreev bound states can also be created and controlled through gate tuning. Tuning a device into the open regime can reveal Andreev enhancement of the subgap conductance, suggesting a remarkable transparent superconductor-semiconductor interface, with a transparency of ∼ 0.96. These results pave the way for diverse superconducting quantum devices based on PbTe nanowires.
* Tsinghua University Initiative Scientific Research Program
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Publication: Gao Y*, Song W*, Yang S*, et al. Hard superconducting gap in PbTe nanowires. arXiv:2309.01355.
Presenters
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Yichun Gao
Tsinghua University
Authors
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Yichun Gao
Tsinghua University