U. Filippozzi
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4 records found
1
In Chapter 1 we give a brief introduction to the physics of interfacial oxide superconductors.
In Chapter 2 we investigate the extreme resilience of the superconducting state to planar magnetic fields and find the highest critical fields ever reported at oxide interfaces. By considering paramagnetic and orbital pair breaking on equal footing, we find that the magnitude of the critical fields is enabled by the cooperation of an atomically thin superconducting layer and strong spin-orbit scattering.
In Chapter 3 we study the quantum corrections to conductivity that affect the resistive transitions at (111) LaAlO3/KTaO3 interfaces. We find that, thanks to electron-phonon scattering, electrons experience significant decoherence which enables sizeable conductivity contributions from quasiparticle-interference and Maki-Thompson superconducting fluctuations.
Finally in Chapter 4 we discover that the very low temperature switching behavior of our samples are compatible with the spontaneous formation of a Josephson junction array at this interface. Investigating the resistive switching in time-reversal-symmetric conditions we find that the superconducting patches can couple through non-harmonic current-phase relations and sizeable capacitive contributions. This results in a stochastic distribution of switching currents. In the presence of an externally applied magnetic field, we observe non reciprocal responses that affect both the average and width of the switching currents distributions. We propose a simple model in which phase frustration and a non-harmonic CPR can rectify thermally activated fluctuations in the array. ...
In Chapter 1 we give a brief introduction to the physics of interfacial oxide superconductors.
In Chapter 2 we investigate the extreme resilience of the superconducting state to planar magnetic fields and find the highest critical fields ever reported at oxide interfaces. By considering paramagnetic and orbital pair breaking on equal footing, we find that the magnitude of the critical fields is enabled by the cooperation of an atomically thin superconducting layer and strong spin-orbit scattering.
In Chapter 3 we study the quantum corrections to conductivity that affect the resistive transitions at (111) LaAlO3/KTaO3 interfaces. We find that, thanks to electron-phonon scattering, electrons experience significant decoherence which enables sizeable conductivity contributions from quasiparticle-interference and Maki-Thompson superconducting fluctuations.
Finally in Chapter 4 we discover that the very low temperature switching behavior of our samples are compatible with the spontaneous formation of a Josephson junction array at this interface. Investigating the resistive switching in time-reversal-symmetric conditions we find that the superconducting patches can couple through non-harmonic current-phase relations and sizeable capacitive contributions. This results in a stochastic distribution of switching currents. In the presence of an externally applied magnetic field, we observe non reciprocal responses that affect both the average and width of the switching currents distributions. We propose a simple model in which phase frustration and a non-harmonic CPR can rectify thermally activated fluctuations in the array.
Quantum materials can display physical phenomena rooted in the geometry of electronic wavefunctions. The corresponding geometric tensor is characterized by an emergent field known as the Berry curvature (BC). Large BCs typically arise when electronic states with different spin, orbital or sublattice quantum numbers hybridize at finite crystal momentum. In all the materials known to date, the BC is triggered by the hybridization of a single type of quantum number. Here we report the discovery of the first material system having both spin- and orbital-sourced BC: LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interfaces grown along the [111] direction. We independently detect these two sources and probe the BC associated to the spin quantum number through the measurements of an anomalous planar Hall effect. The observation of a nonlinear Hall effect with time-reversal symmetry signals large orbital-mediated BC dipoles. The coexistence of different forms of BC enables the combination of spintronic and optoelectronic functionalities in a single material.
Although 2D materials hold great potential for next-generation pressure sensors, recent studies revealed that gases permeate along the membrane-surface interface, necessitating additional sealing procedures. In this work, we demonstrate the use of free-standing complex oxides as self-sealing membranes that allow the reference cavity beneath to be sealed by a simple anneal. To test the hermeticity, we study the gas permeation time constants in nanomechanical resonators made from SrRuO3 and SrTiO3 membranes suspended over SiO2/Si cavities which show an improvement up to 4 orders of magnitude in the permeation time constant after annealing the devices. Similar devices fabricated on Si3N4/Si do not show such improvements, suggesting that the adhesion increase over SiO2 is mediated by oxygen bonds that are formed at the SiO2/complex oxide interface during the self-sealing anneal. Picosecond ultrasonics measurements confirm the improvement in the adhesion by 70% after annealing.
The superconducting analogue to the semiconducting diode, the Josephson diode, has long been sought with multiple avenues to realization being proposed by theorists1–3. Showing magnetic-field-free, single-directional superconductivity with Josephson coupling, it would serve as the building block for next-generation superconducting circuit technology. Here we realized the Josephson diode by fabricating an inversion symmetry breaking van der Waals heterostructure of NbSe2/Nb3Br8/NbSe2. We demonstrate that even without a magnetic field, the junction can be superconducting with a positive current while being resistive with a negative current. The ΔIc behaviour (the difference between positive and negative critical currents) with magnetic field is symmetric and Josephson coupling is proved through the Fraunhofer pattern. Also, stable half-wave rectification of a square-wave excitation was achieved with a very low switching current density, high rectification ratio and high robustness. This non-reciprocal behaviour strongly violates the known Josephson relations and opens the door to discover new mechanisms and physical phenomena through integration of quantum materials with Josephson junctions, and provides new avenues for superconducting quantum devices.