2009 APS March Meeting
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session Y1: Superconductivity and Quantum Transport in Nanowires
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 20, 2009
Room: Spirit of Pittsburgh Ballroom A
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Alexei Berzryadi, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.Y1.2
Abstract: Y1.00002 : Statistics of superconductive-resistive switching in nanowires: An effective probe for resolving phase-slip events*
8:36 AM–9:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Nayana Shah
(University of Illinois)
Phase slips are topological fluctuation events that carry the
superconducting order-parameter field between distinct current
carrying states and impart a non-zero resistance to
superconducting nanowires. They play a fundamental role in
determining the fate of superconductivity in nanowires.
Conversely, superconducting nanowires provide an ideal setting
for accessing non-trivial fluctuations driven by thermal
activation and---at low temperatures---by quantum tunneling of a
one-dimensional field. However, this potential has not been fully
realized because resistance measurements, on the one hand, are
capable of capturing only the averaged phase-slip behavior, and
on the other hand, are incapable of pinning down the low
temperature phase-slip behavior, as the measured resistance
values drop below the noise floor. On going beyond the
linear-response regime, the I-V characteristics show a hysteretic
behavior. As the current is ramped up repeatedly, the state
switches from a superconductive to a resistive one, doing so at
somewhat random current values below the depairing critical
current. The distribution of these switching currents was studied
recently [1]. In this talk, I will report on the rather
counter-intuitive temperature dependence of the distribution and
its theoretical understanding via a stochastic model developed in
Ref [2]. I will show that although, in general, several
phase-slip events are necessary to induce switching, there is an
experimentally accessible temperature- and current-range for
which a single phase-slip event is sufficient to switch the wire
to the normal (resistive) state. I will conclude by arguing that
switching-current statistics provide an effective probe to
resolve individual phase-slip events and in addition offer
unprecedented access to quantum phase-slip tunneling events.
\\[4pt]
[1] M. Sahu, M.-H. Bae, A. Rogachev, D. Pekker, T.-C. Wei, N.
Shah, P. M. Goldbart, and A. Bezryadin, arXiv:0804.2251\\[0pt]
[2] N. Shah, D. Pekker, and P. M. Goldbart, Phys. Rev. Lett. 101,
207001 (2008)
*This work was supported by DOE grant DE-FG02-07ER46453.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.Y1.2