We investigate the critical current, I C , of ballistic Josephson junctions made of encapsulated graphene/boron-nitride heterostructures. We observe a crossover from the short to the long junction regimes as the length of the device increases. In long ballistic junctions, I C is found to scale as ∝ exp(−k B T /δE). The extracted energies δE are independent of the carrier density and proportional to the level spacing of the ballistic cavity, as determined from Fabry-Perot oscillations of the junction normal resistance. As T → 0 the critical current of a long (or short) junction saturates at al level determined by the product of δE (or ∆) and the number of the junction's transversal modes.1 arXiv:1604.07320v3 [cond-mat.mes-hall] Oct 2016Encapsulated graphene/boron-nitride heterostructures emerged in the past year as a medium of choice for studying proximity-induced superconductivity in the ultra-clean limit [1][2][3][4]. These junctions support the ballistic propagation of superconducting currents across micron-scale graphene channels, and their critical current is gate-tunable across several orders of magnitude. In these devices, a rich phenomenology arises from the interplay of superconductivity with ballistic transport [1], cyclotron motion [2], and even the quantum Hall effect at high magnetic field [4]. In a superconductor -normal metal -superconductor (SNS) junction, single particles in the N region cannot enter the superconductor and therefore experience Andreev reflections at each S-N interface. This results in Andreev bound states (ABS), which are capable of 2 carrying superconducting current across the N region. In long ballistic junctions, the energy spectrum of the ABS is quantized with a level spacing of T is independent of V G . In the case of long ballistic graphene junctions, the inverse slope δE is expected to be independent of the carrier density and inversely proportional to L.In this work we study several ballistic junctions of different length and demonstrate that the temperature dependence of the critical current dramatically differs in the long and short regimes. For long junctions, we observe an exponential scaling of the current through the [5, 6,10,11]. Note that in graphene v F is a constant, and δE is expected to be independent of the carrier density or the mobility , 17-21], which could be attributed to either underdamped junction dynamics [8,20], or to the self-heating by the retrapping current [1,23]. As discussed in the supplementary material, the second scenario is more likely for most of the range studied here. Based on the measurements of the switching statistics [16,[24][25][26], in the following we will use the switching current to represent the true critical current of the junction, I C .In the hole-doped regime, the reflections of ballistic charge carriers from the n-doped contact interfaces yield the quantum ("Fabry-Perot") interference. A very similar oscillation pattern could be observed in the dependence of both the the normal conductance, G N , and the critica...
We investigate the electronic properties of ballistic planar Josephson junctions with multiple superconducting terminals. Our devices consist of monolayer graphene encapsulated in boron nitride with molybdenum-rhenium contacts. Resistance measurements yield multiple resonant features, which are attributed to supercurrent flow among adjacent and non-adjacent Josephson junctions. In particular, we find that superconducting and dissipative currents coexist within the same region of graphene. We show that the presence of dissipative currents primarily results in electron heating and estimate the associated temperature rise. We find that the electrons in encapsulated graphene are efficiently cooled through the electron-phonon coupling.
When a Josephson junction is exposed to radio frequency radiation it undergoes the inverse AC Josephson effect -the phase of the junction locks to the drive frequency. As a result, the I − V curves of the junction acquire "Shapiro steps" of quantized voltage. If the junction has three or more superconducting terminals, coupling between different pairs of contacts must be taken into account and the state of the junction evolves in a phase space of higher dimensionality. Here, we study the multi-terminal inverse AC Josephson effect in a graphene sample with four superconducting terminals. We observe correlated switching events caused by the interplay of the connected junctions on the device. Additionally, we find a competition between trivial voltage steps, which are created by the device's resistor network, and nonlinear integer and fractional steps, which are created by the device's Josephson network. We successfully simulate the observed behaviors using a modified 3-dimensional RCSJ model.
We present a study of a graphene-based Josephson junction with dedicated side gates carved from the same sheet of graphene as the junction itself. These side gates are highly efficient and allow us to modulate carrier density along either edge of the junction in a wide range. In particular, in magnetic fields in the 1- to 2-T range, we are able to populate the next Landau level, resulting in Hall plateaus with conductance that differs from the bulk filling factor. When counter-propagating quantum Hall edge states are introduced along either edge, we observe a supercurrent localized along that edge of the junction. Here, we study these supercurrents as a function of magnetic field and carrier density.
The AC Josephson effect manifests itself in the form of "Shapiro steps" of quantized voltage in Josephson junctions subject to radiofrequency (RF) radiation. This effect presents an early example of a driven−dissipative quantum phenomenon and is presently utilized in primary voltage standards. Shapiro steps have also become one of the standard tools to probe junctions made in a variety of novel materials. Here we study Shapiro steps in a widely tunable graphene-based Josephson junction in which the highfrequency dynamics is determined by the on-chip environment. We investigate the variety of patterns that can be obtained in this well-understood system depending on the carrier density, temperature, RF frequency, and magnetic field. Although the patterns of Shapiro steps can change drastically when just one parameter is varied, the overall trends can be understood and the behaviors straightforwardly simulated, showing some key differences from the conventional RCSJ model. The resulting understanding may help interpret similar measurements in more complex materials.
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