Planar MgB<sub>2</sub> Josephson junctions and arrays made by focused helium ion beam

ORAL

Abstract

Planar Josephson junctions and series arrays were fabricated in magnesium diboride (MgB2) thin films grown by hybrid physical-chemical vapor deposition. The junction barrier is created by locally damaging the crystal structure of the MgB2 with a 30 keV He+ ion beam focused to a diameter < 1 nm. Prior irradiation experiments over large areas showed a critical dose of 8x1015/cm2 for complete Tc suppression. Single-track irradiation results in Josephson coupling across the damaged region for a narrow dose window between 0.8–4x1016/cm2. All junctions in this window show resistively-shunted I-V behavior, Shapiro steps under microwave radiation and Fraunhofer-pattern modulation of the critical current in magnetic field at temperatures as high as 26 K, indicative of highly uniform barrier properties. A 10-junction series array shows giant Shapiro steps and modulation of critical current in magnetic field. Analysis on a 30-junction series array shows a spread in critical current of ~12%, drastically lower than spreads reported in MgB2 junctions fabricated by other techniques. This work demonstrates the potential of the focused He+ ion beam damage technique in MgB2 Josephson multi-junction circuit applications.

*This work was supported by NSF–DMR Award 1310087

Presenters

  • Leila Kasaei

    • Physics, Temple University

Authors

  • Thomas Melbourne

    • Physics, Temple University
  • Leila Kasaei

    • Physics, Temple University
  • Viacheslav Manichev

    • Physics, Rutgers University
  • Narendra Acharya

    • Physics, Temple University
  • Leonard Feldman

    • Rutgers University
    • Institute for Advanced Materials, Rutgers University
    • Physics, Rutgers University
  • Ke Chen

    • Physics, Temple University
  • Xiaoxing Xi

    • Physics Department, Temple University
    • Physics, Temple University
  • Bruce Davidson

    • Physics, Temple University