Macroscale three-dimensional proximity effect in disordered normal/superconductor nanocomposites
Katsuya Ueno, Nobuhito Kokubo, Satoru Okayasu, Tsutomu Nojima,, Yukihito Nagashima, Yusuke Seto, Megumi Matsumoto, Takahiro Sakurai, Hithoshi, Ohta, Kazuyuki Takahashi, Takashi Uchino

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a macroscale proximity effect in disordered nanocomposites, where a large normal region transitions into a superconducting state, revealing new possibilities for superconductivity in disordered materials.
Contribution
It shows that a three-dimensional proximity effect can occur over bulk scales in disordered nanocomposites, extending the understanding of proximity-induced superconductivity.
Findings
Normal regions of over 100x100 micrometers become superconducting.
Vortex behavior similar to Abrikosov vortices observed.
Induced superconductivity exhibits anisotropic magnetization.
Abstract
Recently, interest in Superconductor (S)-Normal (N) interfaces was renewed by the observation of exotic proximity effects in various systems, including S/semiconductor, S/ferromagnet, and S/topological insulator. In general, the proximity effect is enhanced in transparent weak links where coherent Andreev reflection is possible. Also, it is a common knowledge that the proximity effect is, by definition, is a localized phenomenon that can only be active in each S/N interface region. However, here we show that a three-dimensional (3D) macroscale proximity effect is realized in few-micrometer-thick MgO/Mg2Si/MgB2 nanocomposite layers with atomically smooth and clean heterointerfaces. We found from scanning superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) microscopy measurements that a normal region of more than 100x100 square micrometers totally undergoes transition into a bulk-like…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Topological Materials and Phenomena
