Full range of proximity effect probed with Superconductor/Graphene/Superconductor junctions
Chuan Li, S. Gu\'eron, A. Chepelianskii, H. Bouchiat

TL;DR
This study investigates the full spectrum of the superconducting proximity effect in graphene-based superconductor/graphene/superconductor junctions, revealing universal behavior and the impact of interface barriers on supercurrent across different regimes.
Contribution
It provides comprehensive experimental data on proximity effects in graphene junctions, highlighting the role of interface barriers and bridging short and long junction regimes with universal scaling laws.
Findings
Supercurrent behavior follows a universal law across regimes.
Interface barriers significantly reduce supercurrent independent of gate voltage.
Reduced induced gap and Thouless energy reveal barrier effects on transport.
Abstract
The high tunability of the density of states of graphene makes it an ideal probe of quantum transport in different regimes. In particular, the supercurrent that can flow through a non-superconducting (N) material connected to two superconducting electrodes, crucially depends on the lenghth of the N relative to the superconducting coherence length. Using graphene as the N material we have investigated the full range of the superconducting proximity effect, from short to long diffusive junctions. By combining several S/graphene/S samples with different contacts and lengths, and measuring their gate-dependent critical currents () and normal state resistance , we compare the product to the relevant energies, the Thouless energy in long junctions and the superconducting gap of the contacts in short junctions, over three orders of magnitude of Thouless energy. The…
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