Superconductivity and ferromagnetism are antagonistic forms of order, and rarely coexist. Many interesting new phenomena occur, however, in hybrid superconducting/ferromagnetic systems. For example, a Josephson junction containing a ferromagnetic material can exhibit an intrinsic phase shift of π in its ground state for certain thicknesses of the material. Such â €π-junctions'were first realized experimentally in 2001 (refs,), and have been proposed as circuit elements for both high-speed classical superconducting computing and for quantum computing. Here we demonstrate experimentally that the phase state of a Josephson junction containing two ferromagnetic layers can be toggled between 0 and π by changing the relative orientation of the two magnetizations. These controllable 0-π junctions have immediate applications in cryogenic memory, where they serve as a necessary component to an ultralow power superconducting computer. Such a fully superconducting computer is estimated to be orders of magnitude more energy-efficient than current semiconductor-based supercomputers. Phase-controllable junctions also open up new possibilities for superconducting circuit elements such as superconducting 'programmable logic', where they could function in superconducting analogues to field-programmable gate arrays.
CITATION STYLE
Gingrich, E. C., Niedzielski, B. M., Glick, J. A., Wang, Y., Miller, D. L., Loloee, R., … Birge, N. O. (2016). Controllable 0-π Josephson junctions containing a ferromagnetic spin valve. Nature Physics, 12(6), 564–567. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3681
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