Conduction spectroscopy of a proximity induced superconducting topological insulator
Martin P. Stehno, Nico W. Hendrickx, Marieke Snelder, Thijs Scholten,, Yingkai Huang, Mark S. Golden, Alexander Brinkman

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopy to investigate proximity-induced superconductivity in topological insulators, revealing conductance features consistent with p-wave pairing and potential Majorana states, advancing understanding of superconductor-TI interfaces.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of proximity-induced superconductivity and novel spectroscopic features in topological insulators, highlighting the effects of disorder and interface barriers.
Findings
Conductance dips at the induced gap voltage.
Increased sub-gap conductance consistent with p-wave pairing.
Observation of linearly spaced energy oscillations.
Abstract
The combination of superconductivity and the helical spin-momentum locking at the surface state of a topological insulator (TI) has been predicted to give rise to p-wave superconductivity and Majorana bound states. The superconductivity can be induced by the proximity effect of a an s-wave superconductor (S) into the TI. To probe the superconducting correlations inside the TI, dI/dV spectroscopy has been performed across such S-TI interfaces. Both the alloyed BiSbTeSe and the stoichiometric BiSbTeSe have been used as three dimensional TI. In the case of BiSbTeSe, the presence of disorder induced electron-electron interactions can give rise to an additional zero-bias resistance peak. For the stoichiometric BiSbTeSe with less disorder, tunnel barriers were employed in order to enhance the signal from the interface.…
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