Evidence for chiral supercurrent in quantum Hall Josephson junctions
Nature 624, 545 (2023) Hybridizing superconductivity with the quantum Hall (QH) effects has major potential for designing novel circuits capable of inducing and manipulating non-Abelian states for topological quantum computation. However, despite recent experimental progress towards this hybridizati...
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Zusammenfassung: | Nature 624, 545 (2023) Hybridizing superconductivity with the quantum Hall (QH) effects has major
potential for designing novel circuits capable of inducing and manipulating
non-Abelian states for topological quantum computation. However, despite recent
experimental progress towards this hybridization, concrete evidence for a
chiral QH Josephson junction -- the elemental building block for coherent
superconducting-QH circuits -- is still lacking. Its expected signature is an
unusual chiral supercurrent flowing in QH edge channels, which oscillates with
a specific $2\phi_0$ magnetic flux periodicity ($\phi_0=h/2e$ is the
superconducting flux quantum, $h$ the Planck constant and $e$ the electron
charge). Here, we show that ultra-narrow Josephson junctions defined in
encapsulated graphene nanoribbons exhibit such a chiral supercurrent, visible
up to 8 teslas, and carried by the spin-degenerate edge channel of the QH
plateau of resistance $h/2e^2\simeq 12.9$ k$\Omega$. We observe reproducible
$2\phi_0$-periodic oscillation of the supercurrent, which emerges at constant
filling factor when the area of the loop formed by the QH edge channel is
constant, within a magnetic-length correction that we resolve in the data.
Furthermore, by varying the junction geometry, we show that reducing the
superconductor/normal interface length is pivotal to obtain a measurable
supercurrent on QH plateaus, in agreement with theories predicting dephasing
along the superconducting interface. Our findings mark a critical milestone
along the path to explore correlated and fractional QH-based superconducting
devices that should host non-Abelian Majorana and parafermion zero modes. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2305.01766 |