Conductance spectra of (Nb, Pb, In)/NbP -- superconductor/Weyl semimetal junctions
G. Grabecki (1), A. D\k{a}browski (1), P. Iwanowski (1,2), A. Hruban, (1), B.J. Kowalski (1), N. Olszowska (3), J. Ko{\l}odziej (3), M. Chojnacki, (1), K. Dybko (1,2), A. {\L}usakowski (1), T. Wojtowicz (2), T. Wojciechowski, (1,2), R. Jakie{\l}a (1), and A. Wi\'sniewski (1

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the induction of superconductivity in a type-I Weyl semimetal NbP through superconductor contact, revealing varied interface transmission behaviors and the potential for superconducting phase formation.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of superconductivity induction in NbP via superconductor contacts and analyzes interface transmission mechanisms in detail.
Findings
Andreev reflection dominates subgap conductance.
In-In contacts show high transmission and proximity effects.
Indium diffusion enables transparent superconductor-Weyl semimetal interfaces.
Abstract
The possibility of inducing superconductivity in type-I Weyl semimetal through coupling its surface to a superconductor was investigated. A single crystal of NbP, grown by chemical vapor transport method, was carefully characterized by XRD, EDX, SEM, ARPES techniques and by electron transport measurements. The mobility spectrum of the carriers was determined. For the studies of interface transmission, the (001) surface of the crystal was covered by several hundred nm thick metallic layers of either Pb, or Nb, or In. DC current-voltage characteristics and AC differential conductance through the interfaces as a function of the DC bias were investigated. When the metals become superconducting, all three types of junctions show conductance increase, pointing out the Andreev reflection as a prevalent contribution to the subgap conductance. In the case of Pb-NbP and Nb-NbP junctions, the…
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