6533b7dafe1ef96bd126d972
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Phase-dependent microwave response of a graphene Josephson junction
R. HallerG. FülöpD. IndoleseJ. RidderbosR. KraftL. Y. CheungJ. H. UngererK. WatanabeT. TaniguchiD. BeckmannR. DanneauP. VirtanenC. Schönenbergersubject
TechnologyCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicssuprajohtavuusnanoelektroniikkaCondensed Matter - Superconductivityelektroniset piiritFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall EffectsuprajohteetSuperconductivity (cond-mat.supr-con)mikroaallotCondensed Matter::SuperconductivityMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)grafeeniddc:600description
Gate-tunable Josephson junctions embedded in a microwave environment provide a promising platform to in situ engineer and optimize novel superconducting quantum circuits. The key quantity for the circuit design is the phase-dependent complex admittance of the junction, which can be probed by sensing a radio frequency SQUID with a tank circuit. Here, we investigate a graphene-based Josephson junction as a prototype gate-tunable element enclosed in a SQUID loop that is inductively coupled to a superconducting resonator operating at 3 GHz. With a concise circuit model that describes the dispersive and dissipative response of the coupled system, we extract the phase-dependent junction admittance corrected for self-screening of the SQUID loop. We decompose the admittance into the current-phase relation and the phase-dependent loss, and as these quantities are dictated by the spectrum and population dynamics of the supercurrent-carrying Andreev bound states, we gain insight to the underlying microscopic transport mechanisms in the junction. We theoretically reproduce the experimental results by considering a short, diffusive junction model that takes into account the interaction between the Andreev spectrum and the electromagnetic environment, from which we estimate lifetimes on the order of ∼10 ps for nonequilibrium populations. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-08-02 | Physical Review Research |