The origin of bias independent conductance plateaus and zero bias conductance peaks in Bi2Se3/NbSe2 hybrid structures
Hui Li, Tong Zhou, Jun He, Huanwen Wang, Huachen Zhang, Hong-Chao Liu,, Ya Yi, Changming Wu, Kam Tuen Law, Hongtao He, Jiannong Wang

TL;DR
This study investigates the superconducting proximity effect in Bi2Se3/NbSe2 hybrid structures, revealing distinct conductance features linked to topological surface states and bulk states, advancing understanding of Majorana fermions in condensed matter.
Contribution
It provides experimental and numerical evidence distinguishing the proximity effect in topological surface states from bulk states in Bi2Se3/NbSe2 hybrids, clarifying their roles in conductance features.
Findings
Observation of bias-independent conductance plateau below 7 K
Emergence of zero bias conductance peak at lower temperatures
Numerical simulations confirm different proximity effects in surface and bulk states
Abstract
Superconducting proximity effect (SPE) in topological insulator (TI) and superconductor (SC) hybrid structure has attracted intense attention in recent years in an effort to search for mysterious Majorana fermions (MFs) in condensed matter systems. Here we report on the SPE in a Bi2Se3/NbSe2 junction fabricated with an all-dry transfer method. Resulting from the highly transparent interface, two sharp resistance drops are observed at 7 K and 2 K, respectively, corresponding to the superconducting transition of NbSe2 flake and the SPE induced superconductivity in Bi2Se3 flake. Experimentally measured differential conductance spectra exhibit a bias-independent conductance plateau (BICP) in the vicinity of zero bias below 7 K. As temperatures further decrease a zero bias conductance peak (ZBCP) emerges from the plateau and becomes more enhanced and sharpened at lower temperatures. Our…
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