Effects of the Spatial Extension of the Edge Channels on the Interference Pattern of a Helical Josephson Junction

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2023 Jan 31;13(3):569. doi: 10.3390/nano13030569.

Abstract

Josephson junctions (JJs) in the presence of a magnetic field exhibit qualitatively different interference patterns depending on the spatial distribution of the supercurrent through the junction. In JJs based on two-dimensional topological insulators (2DTIs), the electrons/holes forming a Cooper pair (CP) can either propagate along the same edge or be split into the two edges. The former leads to a SQUID-like interference pattern, with the superconducting flux quantum ϕ0 (where ϕ0=h/2e) as a fundamental period. If CPs' splitting is additionally included, the resultant periodicity doubles. Since the edge states are typically considered to be strongly localized, the critical current does not decay as a function of the magnetic field. The present paper goes beyond this approach and inspects a topological JJ in the tunneling regime featuring extended edge states. It is here considered the possibility that the two electrons of a CP propagate and explore the junction independently over length scales comparable to the superconducting coherence length. As a consequence of the spatial extension, a decaying pattern with different possible periods is obtained. In particular, it is shown that, if crossed Andreev reflections (CARs) are dominant and the edge states overlap, the resulting interference pattern features oscillations whose periodicity approaches 2ϕ0.

Keywords: 2ϕ0 periodicity; Josephson junctions; edge states; interference pattern; topological insulators.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the “Dipartimento di Eccellenza MIUR 2018–2022” and the funding of the European Union–NextGenerationEU through the “Understanding even–odd criticality’’ project, in the framework of the Curiosity Driven Grant 2021 of the University of Genova. This work was further supported by the Würzburg-Dresden Cluster of Excellence ct.qmat, EXC2147, project-id 390858490, and the DFG (SFB 1170). We also thank the Bavarian Ministry of Economic Affairs, Regional Development, and Energy for financial support within the High-Tech Agenda Project “Bausteine für das Quanten Computing auf Basis topologischer Materialen”. The work of F.S.B. was partially supported by the Spanish AEI through project PID2020-114252GB-I00 (SPIRIT), the Basque Government through grant IT-1591-22, and IKUR strategy program. F.S.B. acknowledges the A. v. Humboldt Foundation for funding and Prof. Trauzettel for the kind hospitality during his stay at Würzburg University.