Litcius/Paper detail

Supercurrent diode effect in thin film Nb tracks

Nathan Satchell, PM Shepley, MC Rosamond, Gavin Burnell

2023Journal of Applied Physics30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We demonstrate nonreciprocal critical current in 65 nm thick polycrystalline and epitaxial Nb thin films patterned into tracks. The nonreciprocal behavior gives a supercurrent diode effect, where the current passed in one direction is a supercurrent and the other direction is a normal state (resistive) current. We attribute fabrication artifacts to creating the supercurrent diode effect in our tracks. We study the variation of the diode effect with temperature and the magnetic field and find a dependence with the width of the Nb tracks from 2 to 10 μm. For both polycrystalline and epitaxial samples, we find that tracks of width 4 μm provide the largest supercurrent diode efficiency of up to ≈30%, with the effect reducing or disappearing in the widest tracks of 10 μm. We propose a model based on the limiting contributions to the critical current density to explain the track width dependence of the induced supercurrent diode effect. It is anticipated that the supercurrent diode will become a ubiquitous component of the superconducting computer.

Topics & Concepts

SupercurrentDiodeResistive touchscreenMaterials scienceCrystalliteCondensed matter physicsSuperconductivityOptoelectronicsEpitaxyMagnetic fieldFabricationCurrent densityPhysicsJosephson effectNanotechnologyElectrical engineeringQuantum mechanicsAlternative medicineLayer (electronics)MetallurgyMedicinePathologyEngineeringPhysics of Superconductivity and MagnetismQuantum and electron transport phenomenaSurface and Thin Film Phenomena