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Superconducting proximity effect in graphene under inhomogeneous strain

L. Covaci and F. M. Peeters
Phys. Rev. B 84, 241401(R) – Published 5 December 2011

Abstract

The interplay between quantum Hall states and Cooper pairs is usually hindered by the suppression of the superconducting state due to the strong magnetic fields needed to observe the quantum Hall effect. From this point of view, graphene is special since it allows the creation of strong pseudomagnetic fields due to strain. We show that in a Josephson junction made of strained graphene, Cooper pairs will diffuse into the strained region. The pair correlation function will be sublattice polarized due to the polarization of the local density of states in the zero pseudo-Landau level. We uncover two regimes: (1) one in which the cyclotron radius is larger than the junction length, in which case the supercurrent will be enhanced, and (2) the long junction regime where the supercurrent is strongly suppressed because the junction becomes an insulator. In the latter case quantized Hall states form and Andreev scattering at the normal/superconducting interface will induce edge states. Our numerical calculation has become possible due to an extension of the Chebyshev-Bogoliubov–de Gennes method to computations on video cards (GPUs).

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  • Received 17 November 2011

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.84.241401

©2011 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

L. Covaci and F. M. Peeters

  • Department Fysica, Universiteit Antwerpen, Groenenborgerlaan 171, B-2020 Antwerpen, Belgium

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Issue

Vol. 84, Iss. 24 — 15 December 2011

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