Giant Superconducting Diode Effect from Controlled Edge Asymmetry
ORAL
Abstract
Superconducting thin film strips displaying a polarity-dependant critical current, superconducting diode rectification behavior, can be controlled via a small magnetic field. This could serve as an energy-efficient building block for digital circuit logic, similar to semiconductor diodes. Both the Meissner screening effect and symmetry breaking of the two edges in a given superconducting thin film were found to be necessary for V superconducting films to display the rectification. Edge defects achieve vortex pinning as well as the current crowding effect, both of which influence diode efficiency. In previous studies, edge symmetry breaking was not controlled, and was unavoidable in the fabrication process. Edge symmetry can be broken by modulating via engineered edge geometry. We aimed to control the asymmetry of the two edges in V superconducting thin films by patterning rectangular indentations on only one of the two edges. This allowed us to more than double diode efficiency in pure superconductor thin films (with diode efficiency reaching 40%), opening the door for further improvement in creating highly efficient superconductor diodes.
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Presenters
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Amith Varambally
Vestavia Hills High School, Vestavia Hills High School, Vestavia Hills, Alabama 35216, USA
Authors
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Amith Varambally
Vestavia Hills High School, Vestavia Hills High School, Vestavia Hills, Alabama 35216, USA
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Ourania Glezakou-Elbert
Hanford High School, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington 99354, USA
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Yasen Hou
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
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Akashdeep Kamra
Autonomous University of Madrid, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
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Patrick A Lee
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Jagadeesh S Moodera
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT