Search results for "tunne"
showing 10 items of 739 documents
Efficient electronic cooling in heavily doped silicon by quasiparticle tunneling
2001
Cooling of electrons in a heavily doped silicon by quasiparticle tunneling using a superconductor–semiconductor–superconductor double-Schottky-junction structure is demonstrated at low temperatures. In this work, we use Al as the superconductor and thin silicon-on-insulator (SOI) film as the semiconductor. The electron–phonon coupling is measured for the SOI film and the low value of the coupling is shown to be the origin of the observed significant cooling effect.
NIS chip refrigeration
1999
A normal-metal/insulator/superconductor (NIS) tunnel junction can be applied to cool electrons by biasing the junction suitably with external voltage. Two NIS junctions in series can form an efficient microrefrigerator because of the symmetry with bias voltage. Our SINIS microrefrigerator has been capable of reaching electronic temperatures of about 100 mK starting from 300 mK. To achieve appreciable refrigeration of the underlying lattice, the microrefrigerator must be thermally decoupled from the bulk substrate. We have demonstrated experimentally the reduction of lattice temperature by 23 mK at 180 mK by extending the normal electrode on a thin dielectric membrane with four suspended bri…
Comparison among superconducting models for β″-ET4[(H3O)Fe(C2O4)3]·C6H5Br single crystals by scanning tunnelling spectroscopy
2008
Single crystals of the novel superconductor beta ''-(BEDT-TTF)(4)[(H3O)Fe(C2O4)(3)]center dot C6H5Br charge-transfer salt were studied using a scanning tunnelling microscope. The measured samples have an onset critical temperature of about 4.0 K. Features often reported on similar compounds were observed in the tunnelling spectra at 1.4 K. STS spectra are compared with several models for the superconducting density of states. Our analysis evidences inhomogeneous superconductivity and indicates that the presence of a magnetic layer into the sample plays a role in determining the superconducting spectroscopic features. (C) 2008 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
Superconductivity mediated by spin fluctuations in the heavy-fermion compound UPd2 Al3
1999
It is well known that any weak attractive electron–electron interaction in metals can in principle cause the formation of Cooper pairs, which then condense into a superconducting ground state1. In conventional superconductors, this attractive interaction is mediated by lattice vibrations (phonons). But for the heavy-fermion and high-temperature superconductors, alternative pairing interactions are considered to be possible2. For example, the low-temperature properties of heavy-fermion systems are dominated by antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations, which have been considered theoretically3 as a possible cause for Cooper-pair formation. This picture recently received some experimental support: …
Complete stabilization and improvement of the characteristics of tunnel junctions by thermal annealing
2006
We have observed that submicron sized Al--AlO{$_x$}--Al tunnel junctions can be stabilized completely by annealing them in vacuum at temperatures between $350^{\circ}$C and $450^{\circ}$C. In addition, low temperature characterization of the samples after the annealing treatment showed a marked improvement of the tunneling characteristics due to disappearance of unwanted resonances in the current. Charging energy, tunneling resistance, barrier thickness and height all increase after the treatment. The superconducting gap is not affected, but supercurrent is reduced in accordance with the increase of tunneling resistance.
Proximity-induced Josephson-quasiparticle process in a single-electron transistor
1998
We have performed the first experiments in a superconductor - normal metal - superconductor single electron transistor in which there is an extra superconducting strip partially overlapping the normal metal island in good metal-to-metal contact. Superconducting proximity effect gives rise to current peaks at voltages below the quasiparticle threshold. We interpret these peaks in terms of the Josephson-quasiparticle process and discuss their connection with the proximity induced energy gap in the normal metal island.
Scanning tunneling measurements of layers of superconducting 2H-TaSe2: Evidence for a zero-bias anomaly in single layers
2013
This work was supported by the EU (ERC Advanced Grant SPINMOL and COST MP-1201), the Spanish MINECO (Consolider-Ingenio in Molecular Nanoscience, CSD2007-00010 and projects FIS2011-23488, MAT2011-25046, MAT2011-22785 and ACI-2009-0905, co-financed by FEDER), by the Comunidad de Madrid (program Nanobiomagnet) and the Generalitat Valenciana (Programs Prometeo and ISIC-NANO)
Electron–phonon coupling in degenerate silicon-on-insulator film probed using superconducting Schottky junctions
2002
Abstract Energy flow rate in degenerate n-type silicon-on-insulator (SOI) film is studied at low temperatures. The electrons are heated above the lattice temperature by electric field and the electron temperature is measured via semiconductor–superconductor quasiparticle tunneling. The energy flow rate in the system is found to be proportional to T 5 , indicating that electron–phonon relaxation rate and electron–phonon phase breaking rate are proportional to T 3 . The electron–phonon system in the SOI film is in the “dirty limit” where the electron mean free path is smaller than the inverse of the thermal phonon wave vector.
Resonant Tunneling through a Macroscopic Charge State in a Superconducting Single Electron Transistor
1997
We predict theoretically and observe in experiment that the differential conductance of a superconducting single electron transistor exhibits a peak which is a complete analog, in a macroscopic system, of a standard resonant tunneling peak associated with tunneling through a single quantum state. In particular, in a symmetric transistor, the peak height is universal and equal to ${e}^{2}/2\ensuremath{\pi}\ensuremath{\Elzxh}$. Away from the resonance we clearly observe the cotunneling current which, in contrast to the normal-metal transistor, varies linearly with the bias voltage.
Strong-coupling effects in the heavy-fermion superconductor UPd2Al3
2000
Abstract Recent results of superconducting tunneling spectroscopy on epitaxial thin films of the antiferromagnetic heavy-fermion superconductor UPd 2 Al 3 are presented. Strong-coupling effects in the tunneling density of states are analyzed within the framework of the anisotropic Eliashberg theory for a pair-coupling mechanism based on the exchange of antiferromagnetic spin excitations. The multi-sheeted Fermi surface of UPd 2 Al 3 is taken into account.