4.5 Article

Magnetotransport Experiments on Fully Metallic Superconducting Dayem-Bridge Field-Effect Transistors

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW APPLIED
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.11.024061

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (COMANCHE)
  2. European Research Council [615187]
  3. European Union [630925]
  4. MIUR under the FIRB 2013 project Coca [RBFR1379UX]
  5. Tuscany Region under FARFAS 2014 project SCIADRO
  6. Tuscany Government [POR FSE 2014-2020, INFN-RT2 172800]
  7. Royal Society through the International Exchanges program [IES R3 170054]
  8. European Research Council (ERC) [615187] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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In the last 60 years conventional solid and electrolyte gating has allowed sizable modulations of the surface carrier concentration in metallic superconductors, resulting in tuning of their conductivity and change of their critical temperature. Recent conventional gating experiments on superconducting metal nanostructures showed full suppression of the critical current without variation of the normal-state resistance and the critical temperature. These results still lack a microscopic explanation. In this article, we describe a complete set of gating experiments on Ti-based superconducting Dayem-bridges and a proposed classical thermodynamic model that seems to account for several of our experimental findings. In particular, zero-bias resistance and critical-current I-C measurements highlight the following: the suppression of I-C with both polarities of gate voltage, the surface nature of the effect, the independence of critical temperature from the electric field, and the gate-induced growth of a subgap dissipative component. In addition, the temperature dependence of the Josephson critical current seems to show a transition from ballistic Kulik-Omelyanchuk behavior to Ambegaokar-Baratoff tunnellike behavior on increase of the electric field. Furthermore, the I-C suppression persists in the presence of sizable perpendicular-to-plane magnetic fields. We propose a classical thermodynamic model able to describe some of the experimental observations of the present and previous work. Above all, the model grabs the bipolar-electric-field-induced suppression of I-C and the emergence of a subgap dissipative component near full suppression of the supercurrent. Finally, applications using the effect discussed are proposed.

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