Effects of fabrication routes and material parameters on the control of superconducting currents by gate voltage

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Abstract

The control of a superconducting current via the application of a gate voltage has been recently demonstrated in a variety of superconducting devices. Although the mechanism underlying this gate-controlled supercurrent (GCS) effect remains under debate, the GCS effect has raised great interest for the development of the superconducting equivalent of conventional metal-oxide semiconductor electronics. To date, however, the GCS effect has been mostly observed in superconducting devices made by additive patterning. Here, we show that devices made by subtractive patterning show a systematic absence of the GCS effect. Doing a microstructural analysis of these devices and comparing them to devices made by additive patterning, where we observe a GCS, we identify some material and physical parameters that are crucial for the observation of a GCS. We also show that some of the mechanisms proposed to explain the origin of the GCS effect are not universally relevant.

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Ruf, L., Elalaily, T., Puglia, C., Ivanov, Y. P., Joint, F., Berke, M., … Di Bernardo, A. (2023). Effects of fabrication routes and material parameters on the control of superconducting currents by gate voltage. APL Materials, 11(9). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0159750

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