Streamline controlled rectification of supercurrent in thin-film asymmetric weak links
Filippo Antola, Sebastiano Battisti, Alessandro Braggio, Francesco Giazotto, Giorgio De Simoni

TL;DR
This paper investigates the supercurrent diode effect in asymmetric mesoscopic superconducting weak links, demonstrating how geometric asymmetry and controlled defects induce rectification through current interactions and vortex dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach using asymmetric Dayem bridges with engineered defects to control supercurrent rectification in superconducting devices.
Findings
Linear rectification at low magnetic fields due to current interactions
Complex vortex behavior at higher fields affecting rectification
Geometry and defect shape critically influence diode efficiency
Abstract
In this study, we examined the supercurrent diode effect (SDE) in mesoscopic superconducting weak links formed by asymmetric Dayem bridges. These planar metallic constrictions, which naturally exhibit Josephsonlike behavior, offer a fundamental platform for investigating nonreciprocal transport phenomena in a regime where the bridge width aligns with the superconducting coherence length. The foundational concept is inspired by the Tesla valve, a classical fluidic device that achieves flow rectification through interference and turbulence between fluid streams enabled by geometric asymmetry. Analogously, we demonstrate that spatial asymmetry within superconducting structures can result in rectification due to the polarity-dependent interaction between transport and screening currents. By implementing controlled geometric defects at the junction between the constriction and…
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