Microwave Enhancement of Phase Slip Rate in Quasi One-Dimensional Superconducting Nanowires
Myung-Ho Bae, R.C. Dinsmore III, M. Sahu, A. Bezryadin

TL;DR
This study investigates how microwave radiation influences phase slip events in superconducting nanowires, revealing a critical power where a dissipative state forms and suggesting quantum phase slips may be involved.
Contribution
It demonstrates microwave-induced suppression of switching currents and introduces a new understanding of phase slip centers beyond existing models.
Findings
Microwave radiation decreases the average switching current.
A critical power induces a dissipative superconducting state.
Quantum phase slips may contribute to switching events.
Abstract
We study current-voltage (V-I) characteristics of short superconducting nanowires of length ~ 100 nm exposed to microwave radiation of frequencies between 100 MHz and 15 GHz. The radiation causes a decrease of the average switching current of the wire. This suppression of the switching current is modeled assuming that there is one-to-one correspondence between Little's phase slips and the experimentally observed switching events. At some critical power P* of the radiation a dissipative dynamic superconducting state occurs as an extra step on the V-I curve. It is identified as a phase slip center (PSC). With the dependence of the switching currents and the standard deviations observed at the transitions (i) from a constant supercurrent state to a normal state and (ii) from a constant superconducting state to a PSC state, we conclude that both of the two types of the switching events are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Superconductivity in MgB2 and Alloys
