Conventional superconductivity is incompatible with ferromagnetism, because the magnetic exchange field tends to spin-polarize electrons and breaks apart the opposite-spin singlet Cooper pairs. Yet, the possibility of a long-range penetration of superconducting correlations into strong ferromagnets has been evinced by experiments that found Josephson coupling between superconducting electrodes separated afar by a ferromagnetic spacer. This is considered a proof of the emergence at the superconductor/ferromagnetic (S/F) interfaces of equal-spin triplet pairing, which is immune to the exchange field and can therefore propagate over long distances into the F (ref.). This effect bears much fundamental interest and potential for spintronic applications. However, a spectroscopic signature of the underlying microscopic mechanisms has remained elusive. Here we do show this type of evidence, notably in a S/F system for which the possible appearance of equal-spin triplet pairing is controversial: heterostructures that combine a half-metallic F (La 0.7 Ca 0.3 MnO 3 ) with a d-wave S (YBa 2 Cu 3 O 7 ). We found quasiparticle and electron interference effects in the conductance across the S/F interfaces that directly demonstrate the long-range propagation across La 0.7 Ca 0.3 MnO 3 of superconducting correlations, and imply the occurrence of unconventional equal-spin Andreev reflection. This allows for an understanding of the unusual proximity behaviour observed in this type of heterostructures. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Visani, C., Sefrioui, Z., Tornos, J., Leon, C., Briatico, J., Bibes, M., … Villegas, J. E. (2012). Equal-spin Andreev reflection and long-range coherent transport in high-temperature superconductor/half-metallic ferromagnet junctions. Nature Physics, 8(7), 539–543. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys2318
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