|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
July
Asymmetric feature
shows puzzling face for superconductivity
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
7/30/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
The weird behavior of electrons tunneling across an atomically flat
interface within a cuprate superconductor has defied explanation by
theories of high-temperature superconductivity.
As will be reported in the journal Physical Review Letters, a team of
scientists led by physics
professor James Eckstein at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
has found a large particle-hole asymmetry in the density of states of
excitations in high-temperature superconducting tunnel junctions embedded
in a single crystal heterostructure. Since superconductors are supposed
to possess particle-hole symmetry – according to current theories
– new theoretical work may be required to explain the strange
results.
In tunneling spectroscopy of superconductors, the differential conductance
is proportional to the density of states in the superconductor. “Below
the superconducting transition, the tunneling conductance showed a large
unexpected asymmetrical feature near zero bias,” Eckstein said.
“This is evidence that crystals of high-temperature superconductors,
atomically truncated with a titanate layer, have intrinsically broken
particle-hole symmetry.”
At negative bias (corresponding to tunneling of electrons from states
with particle-like character) the spectra exhibited the expected superconducting
gap. However, at positive bias (corresponding to tunneling of electrons
into states with hole-like character) the spectra showed a dramatic
step-like increase. “This clearly demonstrates the breaking of
symmetry between particle-like and hole-like excitations at this interface
in the superconducting state,” Eckstein said.
The junction heterostructures were very carefully grown by oxide molecular
beam epitaxy and optimized using in situ monitoring techniques, resulting
in unprecedented crystalline perfection of the superconductor/insulator
interface. It was the precise truncation of the crystal lattice at the
calcium titanate interface that led to the new results.
“The interface density of states was strongly modified by superconductivity,
as expected, but the resulting excitation spectrum was not particle-hole
symmetric,” Eckstein said. “This indicates that at the surface
into which the tunneling occurred, superconductivity is very different
from what it is like away from the interface.”
While the origin of this effect is still being debated, it depends critically
on the high degree of crystalline perfection obtained at the insulator-superconductor
interface.
“The presence of this well-defined interface obviously perturbs
the superconductivity,” Eckstein said. “So these results
can provide a new test for theories of high-temperature superconductivity.”
The co-authors of the Physical Review Letters article are Eckstein,
Bruce Davidson at the INFM-TASC National Laboratory in Italy, Revaz
Ramazashvili at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, and Simon Kos
at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. The U.S. Department
of Energy, National Science Foundation and Office of Naval Research
funded the work.
|
 |
 |
|