Bulk disorder in the superconductor affects proximity-induced topological superconductivity
Hoi-Yin Hui, Jay D. Sau, S. Das Sarma

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that bulk disorder in superconductors can significantly impair proximity-induced topological superconductivity, emphasizing the need for ultraclean bulk superconductors in Majorana fermion experiments.
Contribution
It reveals that bulk superconductor disorder affects topological superconductivity even without disorder in the nanowire or interface, challenging previous assumptions and highlighting the importance of superconductor quality.
Findings
Bulk disorder randomizes Shiba-state energies.
Induced disorder scales faster than the pairing gap with coupling strength.
Strong coupling amplifies the adverse effects of bulk disorder.
Abstract
We investigate effects of ordinary nonmagnetic disorder in the bulk of a superconductor on magnetic adatom-induced Shiba states and on the proximity-induced superconductivity in a nanowire that is tunnel coupled to the bulk superconductor. Within the formalism of self-consistent Born approximation, we show that, contrary to widespread belief, the proximity-induced topological superconductivity can be adversely affected by the bulk superconducting disorder even in the absence of any disorder in the nanowire (or the superconductor-nanowire interface) when the proximity tunnel coupling is strong. In particular, bulk disorder can effectively randomize the Shiba-state energies. In the case of a proximate semiconductor nanowire, we numerically compute the dependence of the effective disorder and pairing gap induced on the wire as a function of the semiconductor-superconductor tunnel coupling.…
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