Frictional drag experiments in LAO/KTO nanowires
ORAL
Abstract
LaAlO3/KTaO3 heterostructures host a gate tunable 2D electron system at its interface that exhibits superconductivity dependent on its crystal orientation of its interface with Tc ~ 2K along [111]. The nature of the superconducting pairing and dependence on orientation dependence is still not well understood. We aim to address these open questions through frictional drag measurements between nanowires in electronic-grade [4] LaAlO3/KTaO3 created using conductive atomic force microscopy (c-AFM) lithography [3]. When two electrical conductors are placed in proximity, driving a current through one conductor can induce a (frictional drag) voltage in the other. In other materials, different interactions have been reported to lead to drag resistance such as coulomb drag, phonon drag, spin drag, vortex drag and excitonic effects. Understanding the dependence of drag resistance on various parameters like temperature, interwire spacing, and magnetic field can provide valuable insights into electron-electron interactions in LaAlO3/KTaO3.
[1] Liu, Changjiang, et al. 2021. Science <a href="tel:371.6530">371.6530 (2021): 716-721.
[2] Chen, Zheng, et al. 2021. Science 372 (6543): 721–24.
[3] Yu, Muqing, et al. Nano Lett. 22.15 (2022): <a href="tel:6062–6068">6062–6068.
[4] Kim, Jieun, et al. 2024. Science Advances 10 (21): eadk4288.
[1] Liu, Changjiang, et al. 2021. Science <a href="tel:371.6530">371.6530 (2021): 716-721.
[2] Chen, Zheng, et al. 2021. Science 372 (6543): 721–24.
[3] Yu, Muqing, et al. Nano Lett. 22.15 (2022): <a href="tel:6062–6068">6062–6068.
[4] Kim, Jieun, et al. 2024. Science Advances 10 (21): eadk4288.
*JL and PI acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation (DMR-2225888). CBE acknowledges support for this research through a Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship (ONR N00014-20-1-2844), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation's EPiQS Initiative, Grant GBMF9065. Transport measurement at the University of Wisconsin–Madison was supported by the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES), under award number DE-FG02-06ER46327.
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Presenters
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Ranjani Ramachandran
- University of Pittsburgh