We observed a novel voltage peak in the proximity-induced superconducting gold(Au) nanowire while cooling the sample through the superconducting transition temperature. The voltage peak turned dip during warming. The ...We observed a novel voltage peak in the proximity-induced superconducting gold(Au) nanowire while cooling the sample through the superconducting transition temperature. The voltage peak turned dip during warming. The voltage peak or dip was found to originate respectively from the emergence or vanishing of the proximity-induced superconductivity in the Au nanowire.The amplitude of the voltage signal depends on the temperature scanning rate, and it cannot be detected when the temperature is changed slower than 0.03 K/min. This transient feature suggests the non-equilibrium property of the effect. Ginzburg-Landau model clarified the voltage peak by considering the emergence of Cooper pairs of relatively lower free energy in superconducting W contact and the non-equilibrium diffusion of Cooper pairs and quasiparticles.展开更多
基金supported by the National Basic Research Program of China(Grant Nos.2017YFA0303300,and 2013CB934600)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant No.11774008)+3 种基金the Open Research Fund Program of the State Key Laboratory of Low-Dimensional Quantum Physics(Grant No.KF201703)at Tsinghua University the Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(Grant No.XDPB08-1)the Peking University President’s Fund for Undergraduate Research(2013)Penn State was supported by NSF grants(MRSEC)(Grant Nos.DMR-0820404 and DMR-1420620)
文摘We observed a novel voltage peak in the proximity-induced superconducting gold(Au) nanowire while cooling the sample through the superconducting transition temperature. The voltage peak turned dip during warming. The voltage peak or dip was found to originate respectively from the emergence or vanishing of the proximity-induced superconductivity in the Au nanowire.The amplitude of the voltage signal depends on the temperature scanning rate, and it cannot be detected when the temperature is changed slower than 0.03 K/min. This transient feature suggests the non-equilibrium property of the effect. Ginzburg-Landau model clarified the voltage peak by considering the emergence of Cooper pairs of relatively lower free energy in superconducting W contact and the non-equilibrium diffusion of Cooper pairs and quasiparticles.