Nanofabrication of Point Contact Junctions for Spectroscopic Studies of High-Temperature Superconductors
ORAL
Abstract
Point contact spectroscopy (PCS) probes the superconducting order parameter from Andreev reflection conductance spectrum. A new method to achieve robust junctions with a precise control of the geometry of the point contact by focused ion beam (FIB) nanofabrication techniques is currently under development. Preliminary application on niobium thin films shows consistent data that is insensitive to thermal cycling. This opens the possibility to perform PCS on a series of materials as a function of external variables, including temperature, magnetic field as a function of angle, and stress. Our preliminary data as a function of junction size show the expected resistance dependence, which will help us to determine more precisely when junctions are in the ballistic, or spectroscopic regime. Our plan is to apply this newly-developed method to probe the electronic nematic state in iron-based superconductors under applied magnetic field and uniaxial stress, to further understand the origin of the nematicity.
*This work is carried out in part in the Materials Research Lab, University of Illinois and is supported by the Center for Emergent Superconductivity, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US DOE, Office of Science, Award No. DE-AC0298CH1088.
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