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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.
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