Engineering hybrid epitaxial InAsSb/Al nanowires for stronger topological protection
Joachim E. Sestoft (University of Copenhagen)
Thomas Kanne (University of Copenhagen)
Aske Nørskov Gejl (University of Copenhagen)
Merlin Von Soosten (University of Copenhagen)
Jeremy S. Yodh (University of Copenhagen)
Brian Michael Tarasinski (Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft, TU Delft - QCD/DiCarlo Lab)
M.T. Wimmer (TU Delft - QN/Wimmer Group, TU Delft - Qubit Research Division, Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft)
Charles Marcus (University of Copenhagen)
P. Krogstrup (TU Delft - QRD/Kouwenhoven Lab, University of Copenhagen)
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Abstract
The combination of strong spin-orbit coupling, large g factors, and the coupling to a superconductor can be used to create a topologically protected state in a semiconductor nanowire. Here we report on growth and characterization of hybrid epitaxial InAsSb/Al nanowires, with varying composition and crystal structure. We find the strongest spin-orbit interaction at intermediate compositions in zinc-blende InAs1-xSbx nanowires, exceeding that of both InAs and InSb materials, confirming recent theoretical studies. We show that the epitaxial InAsSb/Al interface allows for a hard induced superconducting gap and 2e transport in Coulomb charging experiments, similarly to experiments on InAs/Al and InSb/Al materials, and find measurements consistent with topological phase transitions at low magnetic fields due to large effective g factors. Finally we present a method to grow pure wurtzite InAsSb nanowires which are predicted to exhibit even stronger spin-orbit coupling than the zinc-blende structure.
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