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1.
Nano Lett ; 19(5): 3083-3090, 2019 05 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30912948

ABSTRACT

One-dimensional (1D) electronic transport and induced superconductivity in semiconductor nanostructures are crucial ingredients to realize topological superconductivity. Our approach for topological superconductivity employs a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) formed by an InAs quantum well, cleanly interfaced with an epitaxial superconductor (epi-Al). This epi-Al/InAs quantum well heterostructure is advantageous for fabricating large-scale nanostructures consisting of multiple Majorana zero modes. Here, we demonstrate transport studies of building-blocks using a high-quality epi-Al/InAs 2DEG heterostructure, which could be put together to realize various proposed 1D nanowire-based nanostructures and 2DEG-based networks that could host multiple Majorana zero modes. The studies include (1) gate-defined quasi-1D channels in the InAs 2DEG and (2) quantum point contacts for tunneling spectroscopy, as well as induced superconductivity in (3) a ballistic Al-InAs 2DEG-Al Josephson junction. From 1D transport, systematic evolution of conductance plateaus in half-integer conductance quanta is observed with Landé g-factor of 17, indicating the strong spin-orbit coupling and high quality of the InAs 2DEG. The improved 2DEG quality leads to ballistic Josephson junctions with enhanced characteristic parameters such as Ic Rn and Iexc Rn, the product of superconducting critical current Ic (and excess current Iexc) and normal resistance Rn. Our results of electronic transport studies based on the 2D approach suggest that the epitaxial superconductor/2D semiconductor system with improved 2DEG quality is suitable for realizing large-scale nanostructures for quantum computing applications.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 118(1): 016801, 2017 Jan 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28106408

ABSTRACT

Transport measurements in inverted InAs/GaSb quantum wells reveal a giant spin-orbit splitting of the energy bands close to the hybridization gap. The splitting results from the interplay of electron-hole mixing and spin-orbit coupling, and can exceed the hybridization gap. We experimentally investigate the band splitting as a function of top gate voltage for both electronlike and holelike states. Unlike conventional, noninverted two-dimensional electron gases, the Fermi energy in InAs/GaSb can cross a single spin-resolved band, resulting in full spin-orbit polarization. In the fully polarized regime we observe exotic transport phenomena such as quantum Hall plateaus evolving in e^{2}/h steps and a nontrivial Berry phase.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 119(13): 136803, 2017 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29341695

ABSTRACT

We report an experimental study of the scaling of zero-bias conductance peaks compatible with Majorana zero modes as a function of magnetic field, tunnel coupling, and temperature in one-dimensional structures fabricated from an epitaxial semiconductor-superconductor heterostructure. Results are consistent with theory, including a peak conductance that is proportional to tunnel coupling, saturates at 2e^{2}/h, decreases as expected with field-dependent gap, and collapses onto a simple scaling function in the dimensionless ratio of temperature and tunnel coupling.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 117(7): 077701, 2016 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27563999

ABSTRACT

A Corbino ring geometry is utilized to analyze edge and bulk conductance of InAs/GaSb quantum well structures. We show that edge conductance exists in the trivial regime of this theoretically predicted topological system with a temperature-insensitive linear resistivity per unit length in the range of 2 kΩ/µm. A resistor network model of the device is developed to decouple the edge conductance from the bulk conductance, providing a quantitative technique to further investigate the nature of this trivial edge conductance, conclusively identified here as being of n type.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 112(4): 043002, 2014 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24580446

ABSTRACT

Detection of electron motion by elastic scattering of short x-ray pulses from a coherent superposition of highly excited electronic states in rare gas atoms is investigated. The laser excitation of the electron wave packet introduces strong anisotropy which facilitates detection, and large differences in the radial distribution of the excited Rydberg and core electrons allow the dynamics to be detected using both soft and hard x rays.

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