Upper critical fields in normal metal-superconductor-normal metal trilayers
Kelsey B. Robbins, Pukar Sedai, Alexandra J. Howzen, Robert M. Klaes,, Reza Loloee, Norman O. Birge, Nathan Satchell

TL;DR
This study investigates how spin-orbit interaction influences the superconducting proximity effect in normal metal-superconductor-normal metal trilayers, revealing effects on critical fields, dimensional behavior, and critical temperature suppression.
Contribution
It provides an experimental survey of various metal trilayers, highlighting the impact of resistivity and spin-orbit interaction on superconducting properties and dimensional crossover behaviors.
Findings
Trilayers have lower upper critical fields than single-layer Nb.
High-resistivity metals like Ti, Pt, Ta show 2D superconductivity.
Observed possible 3D behavior in Ti and Pt trilayers at low fields.
Abstract
The role of spin orbit interaction in superconducting proximity effect is an area of intense research effort. Recent theoretical and experimental works investigate the possible role of spin-orbit interaction in generating spin-triplet pair correlations. In this work, we present an experimental survey of thin normal metal-superconductor-normal metal trilayers with Nb superconductor and Al, Ti, Cu, Pt, Ta, and Au normal metals, along with single layers of Nb as reference. We aim to probe the role of spin-orbit interaction and resistivity on the normal metal proximity effect through measurements of the upper critical field. We find that the upper critical fields of the trilayers are lower than that of a single layer Nb reference sample, and that the trilayers with higher resistivity metals, Ti, Pt, and Ta, behave as 2-dimensional superconductors. At low applied in-plane magnetic fields and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Superconducting Materials and Applications · Magnetic properties of thin films
