Superconducting proximity effect in thin graphite films
ORAL
Abstract
Gate-controlled superconducting proximity effect in thin graphite films is reported. A graphite film with thickness of 4 - 10 nm is connected to two aluminum superconducting electrodes, forming a SNS junction, and gate electric field is applied using a back gate. The critical supercurrent displays an ambipolar behavior, and for a fixed normal-state resistance the electron critical supercurrent with positive gate voltage is always larger than the hole critical supercurrent with negative gate voltage (electron-hole symmetry breaking). This effect is also observed in the critical temperature where the junction resistance vanishes. Furthermore, the critical supercurrent is proportional to $\exp(-(T/T_0)^2)$, which has never been observed in other SNS systems. The details of the experimental results as well as their possible origins will be discussed.
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