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The electric potential energy of a test charge in a uniform eclectic field can be generalized to any electric field produced by static charge distribution. Consider a positive test charge in an electric field produced by another static positive charge. If the test charge is moved away from the static charge, then the electric field does the positive work on the test charge, and the electric potential energy of the test charge decreases as it moves away from the static charge. Here the electric...
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Coulomb's Law describes the force experienced by two point charges under each other's presence. But what if there are more than two charges? For example, if there is a third charge, does it experience a force that is a simple combination of the individual forces due to the first two charges? Can it be described mathematically?
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The contact of metal and semiconductor can lead to the formation of a junction with either Schottky or Ohmic behavior.
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A substance that reaches superconductivity, a state in which magnetic fields cannot penetrate, and there is no electrical resistance, is referred to as a superconductor. In 1911, Heike Kamerlingh Onnes of Leiden University, a Dutch physicist, observed a relation between the temperature and the resistance of the element mercury. The mercury sample was then cooled in liquid helium to study the linear dependence of resistance on temperature. It was observed that, as the temperature decreased, the...
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Scalable Quantum Integrated Circuits on Superconducting Two-Dimensional Electron Gas Platform
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Quantized critical supercurrent in SrTiO3-based quantum point contacts.

Evgeny Mikheev1,2, Ilan T Rosen2,3, David Goldhaber-Gordon1,2

  • 1Department of Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.

Science Advances
|October 1, 2021
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Researchers created superconducting quantum point contacts using only strontium titanate (SrTiO3). This breakthrough enables electrostatic control over superconductivity, paving the way for novel mesoscopic and topological superconducting devices.

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Area of Science:

  • Condensed Matter Physics
  • Materials Science
  • Quantum Phenomena

Background:

  • Superconductivity in strontium titanate (SrTiO3) is observed at low carrier densities, allowing for electrostatic control, unlike conventional superconductors.
  • Developing single-material platforms for mesoscopic superconducting experiments is crucial for advancing quantum technologies.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To demonstrate nanoscale weak links within a single SrTiO3 material for superconducting transport studies.
  • To engineer superconducting quantum point contacts and investigate their properties using electrostatic gating.

Main Methods:

  • Fabrication of nanoscale weak links connecting superconducting leads, all composed of SrTiO3.
  • Utilizing ionic liquid gating to accumulate carriers in the SrTiO3 leads.
  • Employing local electrostatic gates to precisely control the weak link's conductivity.

Main Results:

  • Successful creation of devices behaving as superconducting quantum point contacts.
  • Observation of a quantized critical supercurrent in the fabricated SrTiO3 weak links.
  • Demonstration of electrostatic control over superconductivity at the nanoscale.

Conclusions:

  • Strontium titanate (SrTiO3) can serve as a versatile single-material platform for mesoscopic superconducting experiments.
  • These findings represent a significant step towards engineering topological superconductivity within SrTiO3-based devices.