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Dive into the research topics where Andrew Bestwick is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew Bestwick.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Unconventional Josephson Effect in Hybrid Superconductor-Topological Insulator Devices

James R. Williams; Andrew Bestwick; Peter T. Gallagher; Seung Sae Hong; Yi Cui; Andrew S. Bleich; James G. Analytis; I. R. Fisher; David Goldhaber-Gordon

We report on transport properties of Josephson junctions in hybrid superconducting-topological insulator devices, which show two striking departures from the common Josephson junction behavior: a characteristic energy that scales inversely with the width of the junction, and a low characteristic magnetic field for suppressing supercurrent. To explain these effects, we propose a phenomenological model which expands on the existing theory for topological insulator Josephson junctions.


Nano Letters | 2010

Magnetic Doping and Kondo Effect in Bi2Se3 Nanoribbons

Judy J. Cha; James R. Williams; Desheng Kong; Stefan Meister; Hailin Peng; Andrew Bestwick; Patrick Gallagher; David Goldhaber-Gordon; Yi Cui

A simple surface band structure and a large bulk band gap have allowed Bi2Se3 to become a reference material for the newly discovered three-dimensional topological insulators, which exhibit topologically protected conducting surface states that reside inside the bulk band gap. Studying topological insulators such as Bi2Se3 in nanostructures is advantageous because of the high surface-to-volume ratio, which enhances effects from the surface states; recently reported Aharonov-Bohm oscillation in topological insulator nanoribbons by some of us is a good example. Theoretically, introducing magnetic impurities in topological insulators is predicted to open a small gap in the surface states by breaking time-reversal symmetry. Here, we present synthesis of magnetically doped Bi2Se3 nanoribbons by vapor-liquid-solid growth using magnetic metal thin films as catalysts. Although the doping concentration is less than approximately 2%, low-temperature transport measurements of the Fe-doped Bi2Se3 nanoribbon devices show a clear Kondo effect at temperatures below 30 K, confirming the presence of magnetic impurities in the Bi2Se3 nanoribbons. The capability to dope topological insulator nanostructures magnetically opens up exciting opportunities for spintronics.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Precise Quantization of the Anomalous Hall Effect near Zero Magnetic Field

Andrew Bestwick; Eli Fox; Xufeng Kou; Lei Pan; Kang L. Wang; David Goldhaber-Gordon

We report a nearly ideal quantum anomalous Hall effect in a three-dimensional topological insulator thin film with ferromagnetic doping. Near zero applied magnetic field we measure exact quantization in the Hall resistance to within a part per 10 000 and a longitudinal resistivity under 1  Ω per square, with chiral edge transport explicitly confirmed by nonlocal measurements. Deviations from this behavior are found to be caused by thermally activated carriers, as indicated by an Arrhenius law temperature dependence. Using the deviations as a thermometer, we demonstrate an unexpected magnetocaloric effect and use it to reach near-perfect quantization by cooling the sample below the dilution refrigerator base temperature in a process approximating adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Relaxation and Dephasing in a Two-Electron \(^{13}C\) Nanotube Double Quantum Dot

Hugh Churchill; Ferdinand Kuemmeth; Jennifer W. Harlow; Andrew Bestwick; Emmanuel I. Rashba; Karsten Flensberg; Carolyn Stwertka; Thiti Taychatanapat; Susan K. Watson; C. M. Marcus

We use charge sensing of Pauli blockade (including spin and isospin) in a two-electron 13C nanotube double quantum dot to measure relaxation and dephasing times. The relaxation time T1 first decreases with a parallel magnetic field and then goes through a minimum in a field of 1.4 T. We attribute both results to the spin-orbit-modified electronic spectrum of carbon nanotubes, which at high field enhances relaxation due to bending-mode phonons. The inhomogeneous dephasing time T{2} is consistent with previous data on hyperfine coupling strength in 13C nanotubes.


Nature Physics | 2009

Electron–nuclear interaction in 13 C nanotube double quantum dots

Hugh Churchill; Andrew Bestwick; Jennifer W. Harlow; Ferdinand Kuemmeth; David Marcos; Carolyn Stwertka; Susan K. Watson; C. M. Marcus

For coherent electron spins, hyperfine coupling to nuclei in the host material can either be a dominant source of unwanted spin decoherence or, if controlled effectively, a resource allowing storage and retrieval of quantum information. To investigate the effect of a controllable nuclear environment on the evolution of confined electron spins, we have fabricated and measured gate-defined double quantum dots with integrated charge sensors made from single-walled carbon nanotubes with a variable concentration of 13C (nuclear spin I=1/2) among the majority zero-nuclear-spin 12C atoms. Spin-sensitive transport in double-dot devices grown using methane with the natural abundance (~ 1%) of 13C is compared with similar devices grown using an enhanced (~99%) concentration of 13C. We observe strong isotope effects in spin-blockaded transport, and from the dependence on external magnetic field, estimate the hyperfine coupling in 13C nanotubes to be on the order of 100 micro-eV, two orders of magnitude larger than anticipated theoretically. 13C-enhanced nanotubes are an interesting new system for spin-based quantum information processing and memory, with nuclei that are strongly coupled to gate-controlled electrons, differ from nuclei in the substrate, are naturally confined to one dimension, lack quadrupolar coupling, and have a readily controllable concentration from less than one to 10^5 per electron.


Nature Communications | 2015

Composite fermions and broken symmetries in graphene

Francois Amet; Andrew Bestwick; James R. Williams; L. Balicas; K. Watanabe; T. Taniguchi; David Goldhaber-Gordon

The electronic properties of graphene are described by a Dirac Hamiltonian with a four-fold symmetry of spin and valley. This symmetry may yield novel fractional quantum Hall (FQH) states at high magnetic field depending on the relative strength of symmetry-breaking interactions. However, observing such states in transport remains challenging in graphene, as they are easily destroyed by disorder. In this work, we observe in the first two Landau levels the two-flux composite-fermion sequences of FQH states between each integer filling factor. In particular, the odd-numerator fractions appear between filling factors 1 and 2, suggesting a broken-valley symmetry, consistent with our observation of a gap at charge neutrality and zero field. Contrary to our expectations, the evolution of gaps in a parallel magnetic field suggests that states in the first Landau level are not spin-polarized even up to very large out-of-plane fields.


Nano Letters | 2013

Direct Measurement of Current-Phase Relations in Superconductor/ Topological Insulator/Superconductor Junctions

Ilya Sochnikov; Andrew Bestwick; James R. Williams; I. R. Fisher; David Goldhaber-Gordon; J. R. Kirtley; Kathryn A. Moler

Proximity to a superconductor is predicted to induce exotic quantum phases in topological insulators. Here, scanning superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) microscopy reveals that aluminum superconducting rings with topologically insulating Bi2Se3 junctions exhibit a conventional, nearly sinusoidal 2π-periodic current-phase relations. Pearl vortices occur in longer junctions, indicating suppressed superconductivity in aluminum, probably due to a proximity effect. Our observations establish scanning SQUID as a general tool for characterizing proximity effects and for measuring current-phase relations in new materials systems.


Nature Communications | 2016

Robust fractional quantum Hall effect in the N =2 Landau level in bilayer graphene

Georgi Diankov; Chi-Te Liang; Francois Amet; Patrick G. Gallagher; Menyoung Lee; Andrew Bestwick; Kevin Tharratt; William Coniglio; Jan Jaroszynski; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; David Goldhaber-Gordon

The fractional quantum Hall effect is a canonical example of electron–electron interactions producing new ground states in many-body systems. Most fractional quantum Hall studies have focussed on the lowest Landau level, whose fractional states are successfully explained by the composite fermion model. In the widely studied GaAs-based system, the composite fermion picture is thought to become unstable for the N≥2 Landau level, where competing many-body phases have been observed. Here we report magneto-resistance measurements of fractional quantum Hall states in the N=2 Landau level (filling factors 4<|ν|<8) in bilayer graphene. In contrast with recent observations of particle–hole asymmetry in the N=0/N=1 Landau levels of bilayer graphene, the fractional quantum Hall states we observe in the N=2 Landau level obey particle–hole symmetry within the fully symmetry-broken Landau level. Possible alternative ground states other than the composite fermions are discussed.


Physical Review B | 2015

Resonant magneto-optic Kerr effect in the magnetic topological insulator Cr:(Sbx,Bi1-x)2Te3

Shreyas Patankar; J. P. Hinton; Joel Griesmar; J. Orenstein; J. S. Dodge; Xufeng Kou; Lei Pan; Kang L. Wang; Andrew Bestwick; Eli Fox; David Goldhaber-Gordon; Jing Wang; Shou-Cheng Zhang

Here, we report measurements of the polar Kerr effect, proportional to the out-of-plane component of the magnetization, in thin films of the magnetically doped topological insulator (Cr0.12Bi0.26Sb0.62)2Te3. Measurements of the complex Kerr angle ΘK were performed as a function of photon energy in the range 0.8eV < ℏω < 3.0eV. We observed a peak in the real part of ΘK(ω) and zero crossing in the imaginary part that we attribute to a resonant interaction with a spin-orbit avoided crossing located ≈ 1.6 eV above the Fermi energy. The resonant enhancement allows measurement of the temperature and magnetic field dependence of ΘK in the ultrathin film limit, d ≥ 2 quintuple layers (QL). We find a sharp transition to zero remanent magnetization at 6 K for d < 8 QL, consistent with theories of the dependence of impurity spin interactions on film thickness and their location relative to topological insulator surfaces.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Interplay of chiral and helical states in a quantum spin hall insulator lateral junction

Maria R. Calvo; F. de Juan; Roni Ilan; Eli Fox; Andrew Bestwick; Mathias Mühlbauer; Jun Wang; C. Ames; Philipp Leubner; Christoph Brune; Sipei Zhang; H. Buhmann; L. W. Molenkamp; David Goldhaber-Gordon

We study the electronic transport across an electrostatically gated lateral junction in a HgTe quantum well, a canonical 2D topological insulator, with and without an applied magnetic field. We control the carrier density inside and outside a junction region independently and hence tune the number and nature of 1D edge modes propagating in each of those regions. Outside the bulk gap, the magnetic field drives the system to the quantum Hall regime, and chiral states propagate at the edge. In this regime, we observe fractional plateaus that reflect the equilibration between 1D chiral modes across the junction. As the carrier density approaches zero in the central region and at moderate fields, we observe oscillations in the resistance that we attribute to Fabry-Perot interference in the helical states, enabled by the broken time reversal symmetry. At higher fields, those oscillations disappear, in agreement with the expected absence of helical states when band inversion is lifted.

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Kang L. Wang

University of California

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