Tunable proximity effects and topological superconductivity in ferromagnetic hybrid nanowires
Entity
UAM. Departamento de Física Teórica de la Materia CondensadaPublisher
American Physical SocietyDate
2021-07-19Citation
10.1103/PhysRevB.104.L041404
Physical Review B 104.4 (2021): L041404
ISSN
2469-9950 (print); 2469-9969 (online)DOI
10.1103/PhysRevB.104.L041404Project
Gobierno de España. FIS2016-80434-P; Gobierno de España. FIS2017-84860-R; Gobierno de España. MDM-2014-0377Editor's Version
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.104.L041404Subjects
Applied Magnetic Fields; Electrostatic Environments; Ferromagnetic Insulator; Geometrical Constraints; Proof of Principles; Self-Consistent Mean Field; Semiconducting Nanowires; Superconducting Proximity; FísicaRights
©2021 American Physical SocietyAbstract
Hybrid semiconducting nanowire devices combining epitaxial superconductor and ferromagnetic insulator layers have been recently explored experimentally as an alternative platform for topological superconductivity at zero applied magnetic field. In this proof-of-principle work we show that the topological regime can be reached in actual devices depending on some geometrical constraints. To this end, we perform numerical simulations of InAs wires in which we explicitly include the superconducting Al and magnetic EuS shells, as well as the interaction with the electrostatic environment at a self-consistent mean-field level. Our calculations show that both the magnetic and the superconducting proximity effects on the nanowire can be tuned by nearby gates thanks to their ability to move the wavefunction across the wire section. We find that the topological phase is achieved in significant portions of the phase diagram only in configurations where the Al and EuS layers overlap on some wire facet, due to the rather local direct induced spin polarization and the appearance of an extra indirect exchange field through the superconductor. While of obvious relevance for the explanation of recent experiments, tunable proximity effects are of interest in the broader field of superconducting spintronics
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Google Scholar:Díaz Escribano, Samuel
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Prada, Elsa
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Oreg, Yuval
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Levy-Yeyati Mizrahi, Alfredo
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