Critical current modulation induced by an electric field in superconducting tungsten-carbon nanowires

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Date
2021
Volume
11
Issue
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
[London] : Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature
Abstract

The critical current of a superconducting nanostructure can be suppressed by applying an electric field in its vicinity. This phenomenon is investigated throughout the fabrication and electrical characterization of superconducting tungsten-carbon (W-C) nanostructures grown by Ga+ focused ion beam induced deposition (FIBID). In a 45 nm-wide, 2.7 μm-long W-C nanowire, an increasing side-gate voltage is found to progressively reduce the critical current of the device, down to a full suppression of the superconducting state below its critical temperature. This modulation is accounted for by the squeezing of the superconducting current by the electric field within a theoretical model based on the Ginzburg–Landau theory, in agreement with experimental data. Compared to electron beam lithography or sputtering, the single-step FIBID approach provides with enhanced patterning flexibility and yields nanodevices with figures of merit comparable to those retrieved in other superconducting materials, including Ti, Nb, and Al. Exhibiting a higher critical temperature than most of other superconductors, in which this phenomenon has been observed, as well as a reduced critical value of the gate voltage required to fully suppress superconductivity, W-C deposits are strong candidates for the fabrication of nanodevices based on the electric field-induced superconductivity modulation.

Description
Keywords
Superconducting devices, Superconducting properties and materials
Citation
Orús, P., Fomin, V. M., De Teresa, J. M., & Córdoba, R. (2021). Critical current modulation induced by an electric field in superconducting tungsten-carbon nanowires. 11. https://doi.org//10.1038/s41598-021-97075-z
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported