Proximity-induced superconductivity in graphene
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
2012-10-11 v1 Superconductivity
Abstract
We propose a way of making graphene superconductive by putting on it small superconductive islands which cover a tiny fraction of graphene area. We show that the critical temperature, T_c, can reach several Kelvins at the experimentally accessible range of parameters. At low temperatures, T<<T_c, and zero magnetic field, the density of states is characterized by a small gap E_g<T_c resulting from the collective proximity effect. Transverse magnetic field H_g(T) E_g is expected to destroy the spectral gap driving graphene layer to a kind of a superconductive glass state. Melting of the glass state into a metal occurs at a higher field H_{g2}(T).
Cite
@article{arxiv.0810.0109,
title = {Proximity-induced superconductivity in graphene},
author = {M. V. Feigel'man and M. A. Skvortsov and K. S. Tikhonov},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0810.0109},
year = {2012}
}
Comments
4 pages, 3 figures