Parity independence of the zero-bias conductance peak in a nanowire based topological superconductor-quantum dot hybrid device
M. T. Deng, C. L. Yu, G. Y. Huang, M. Larsson, P. Caroff, and H. Q. Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates Majorana fermion signatures in a nanowire-based topological superconductor-quantum dot hybrid device through charge transport measurements, revealing zero-bias peaks consistent with Majorana physics.
Contribution
It demonstrates the parity-independent zero-bias conductance peak and associated triple-peak structure as signatures of Majorana bound states in a nanowire quantum dot system.
Findings
Zero-bias conductance peak appears in multiple Coulomb diamonds regardless of parity.
The peak is often accompanied by a triple-peak structure with oscillating side peaks.
Results align with theoretical predictions of Majorana bound state hybridization.
Abstract
We explore the signatures of Majorana fermions in a nanowire based topological superconductor-quantum dot-topological superconductor hybrid device by charge transport measurements. The device is made from an epitaxially grown InSb nanowire with two superconductor Nb contacts on a Si/SiO substrate. At low temperatures, a quantum dot is formed in the segment of the InSb nanowire between the two Nb contacts and the two Nb contacted segments of the InSb nanowire show superconductivity due to the proximity effect. At zero magnetic field, well defined Coulomb diamonds and the Kondo effect are observed in the charge stability diagram measurements in the Coulomb blockade regime of the quantum dot. Under the application of a finite, sufficiently strong magnetic field, a zero-bias conductance peak structure is observed in the same Coulomb blockade regime. It is found that the zero-bias…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
