Semiconductor-Ferromagnetic Insulator-Superconductor Nanowires: Stray Field and Exchange Field

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Abstract

Nanowires can serve as flexible substrates for hybrid epitaxial growth on selected facets, allowing for the design of heterostructures with complex material combinations and geometries. In this work we report on hybrid epitaxy of freestanding vapor-liquid-solid grown and in-plane selective area grown semiconductor-ferromagnetic insulator-superconductor (InAs/EuS/Al) nanowire heterostructures. We study the crystal growth and complex epitaxial matching of wurtzite and zinc-blende InAs/rock-salt EuS interfaces as well as rock-salt EuS/face-centered cubic Al interfaces. Because of the magnetic anisotropy originating from the nanowire shape, the magnetic structure of the EuS phase is easily tuned into single magnetic domains. This effect efficiently ejects the stray field lines along the nanowires. With tunnel spectroscopy measurements of the density of states, we show that the material has a hard induced superconducting gap, and magnetic hysteretic evolution which indicates that the magnetic exchange fields are not negligible. These hybrid nanowires fulfill key material requirements for serving as a platform for spin-based quantum applications, such as scalable topological quantum computing.

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Liu, Y., Vaitiekėnas, S., Martí-Sánchez, S., Koch, C., Hart, S., Cui, Z., … Krogstrup, P. (2020). Semiconductor-Ferromagnetic Insulator-Superconductor Nanowires: Stray Field and Exchange Field. Nano Letters, 20(1), 456–462. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04187

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