Tunneling transport in NSN junctions made of Majorana nanowires across the topological quantum phase transition
Alejandro M. Lobos, S. Das Sarma

TL;DR
This paper investigates how disorder and contact transparency affect the detection of Majorana bound states in NSN nanowire structures, proposing a conductance difference method to reliably identify topological phase transitions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel conductance difference measurement technique to observe nonlocal correlations of Majorana states, even under disorder and imperfect contacts.
Findings
Zero bias conductance peaks can be misleading due to disorder and barriers.
Conductance differences reveal nonlocal correlations of Majorana states.
The method maps the topological phase diagram despite disorder.
Abstract
We theoretically consider transport properties of a normal metal (N)- superconducting semiconductor nanowire (S)-normal metal (N) structure (NSN) in the context of the possible existence of Majorana bound states in disordered semiconductor-superconductor hybrid systems in the presence of spin-orbit coupling and Zeeman splitting induced by an external magnetic field. We study in details the transport signatures of the topological quantum phase transition as well as the existence of the Majorana bound states in the electrical transport properties of the NSN structure. Our theory includes the realistic nonperturbative effects of disorder, which is detrimental to the topological phase (eventually suppressing the superconducting gap completely), and the effects of the tunneling barriers (or the transparency at the tunneling NS contacts), which affect (and suppress) the zero bias conductance…
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