Switching effect in metal-superconductor-metal Fe(Te0.7Se0.3) nanojunction

ORAL

Abstract

We report our transport study on the metal-superconductor-metal (MSM) device based on Fe(Te0.7Se0.3) nanoflakes. An unusual switching behavior in I-V characteristics for flakes with a thickness below 10nm has been observed. Furthermore, we discovered that such switching behavior could be controlled by an external magnetic field and bias voltage. Given the traditional understanding that superconductivity in Fe(Te0.7Se0.3) manifests as the collective effect from clusters of nanoscale superconducting domains, we proposed a self-heating model to explain such switching behavior. Our work demonstrates that nanoscale junction between superconducting and normal metal naturally exists in thin Fe(Te0.7Se0.3) nanoflakes, which provides an opportunity to study transport behavior MSM junction in nanoscale.

*This work was supported by the DOE under grant DESC0014208 and by the Board of Regents Support Fund (BoRSF) under grant LEQSF(2015-18)-RD-A-23.

Presenters

  • Yun Ling

    • Suzhou University of Science and Technology

Authors

  • Yun Ling

    • Suzhou University of Science and Technology
  • Andrew Steely

    • Tulane University
  • Abin Joshy

    • Tulane University
  • Zhiqiang Mao

    • Department of Physics, The Pennsylvania State University
    • Pennsylvania State University
    • Physics, Pennsylvania State University
    • Physics, Pennsylvania State Univ
  • Jiang Wei

    • Tulane University