Anne Draelos
Duke University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anne Draelos.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Ivan Borzenets; Francois Amet; Chung-Ting Ke; Anne Draelos; Ming-Tso Wei; Andrew Seredinski; K. Watanabe; T. Taniguchi; Yuriy Bomze; Michihisa Yamamoto; S. Tarucha; Gleb Finkelstein
We investigate the critical current I_{C} of ballistic Josephson junctions made of encapsulated graphene-boron-nitride heterostructures. We observe a crossover from the short to the long junction regimes as the length of the device increases. In long ballistic junctions, I_{C} is found to scale as ∝exp(-k_{B}T/δE). The extracted energies δE are independent of the carrier density and proportional to the level spacing of the ballistic cavity. As T→0 the critical current of a long (or short) junction saturates at a level determined by the product of δE (or Δ) and the number of the junctions transversal modes.
Nano Letters | 2016
Chung Ting Ke; Ivan Borzenets; Anne Draelos; Francois Amet; Yuriy Bomze; Gareth J. F. Jones; Monica F. Craciun; Saverio Russo; Michihisa Yamamoto; S. Tarucha; Gleb Finkelstein
We present transport measurements on long, diffusive, graphene-based Josephson junctions. Several junctions are made on a single-domain crystal of CVD graphene and feature the same contact width of ∼9 μm but vary in length from 400 to 1000 nm. As the carrier density is tuned with the gate voltage, the critical current in these junctions ranges from a few nanoamperes up to more than 5 μA, while the Thouless energy, ETh, covers almost 2 orders of magnitude. Over much of this range, the product of the critical current and the normal resistance ICRN is found to scale linearly with ETh, as expected from theory. However, the value of the ratio ICRN/ETh is found to be 0.1-0.2, which much smaller than the predicted ∼10 for long diffusive SNS junctions.
MRS Advances | 2018
Andrew Seredinski; Anne Draelos; Ming-Tso Wei; Chung-Ting Ke; Tate Fleming; Yash Mehta; Ethan Mancil; Hengming Li; Takashi Taniguchi; Kenji Watanabe; Seigo Tarucha; Michihisa Yamamoto; Ivan Borzenets; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein
Coupling superconductors to quantum Hall edge states is the subject of intense investigation as part of the ongoing search for non-abelian excitations. Our group has previously observed supercurrents of hundreds of picoamperes in graphene Josephson junctions in the quantum Hall regime. One of the explanations of this phenomenon involves the coupling of an electron edge state on one side of the junction to a hole edge state on the opposite side. In our previous samples, these states are separated by several microns. Here, a narrow trench perpendicular to the contacts creates counterpropagating quantum Hall edge channels tens of nanometres from each other. Transport measurements demonstrate a change in the low-field Fraunhofer interference pattern for trench devices and show a supercurrent in both trench and reference junctions in the quantum Hall regime. The trench junctions show no enhancement of quantum Hall supercurrent and an unexpected supercurrent periodicity with applied field, suggesting the need for further optimization of device parameters.
Journal of Low Temperature Physics | 2018
Anne Draelos; Ming Tso Wei; Andrew Seredinski; Chung Ting Ke; Yash Mehta; Russell Chamberlain; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Michihisa Yamamoto; S. Tarucha; Ivan Borzenets; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein
In this study, we examine multiple encapsulated graphene Josephson junctions to determine which mechanisms may be responsible for the supercurrent observed in the quantum Hall (QH) regime. Rectangular junctions with various widths and lengths were studied to identify which parameters affect the occurrence of QH supercurrent. We also studied additional samples where the graphene region is extended beyond the contacts on one side, making that edge of the mesa significantly longer than the opposite edge. This is done in order to distinguish two potential mechanisms: (a) supercurrents independently flowing along both non-contacted edges of graphene mesa, and (b) opposite sides of the mesa being coupled by hybrid electron–hole modes flowing along the superconductor/graphene boundary. The supercurrent appears suppressed in extended junctions, suggesting the latter mechanism.
arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018
Anne Draelos; Ming-Tso Wei; Andrew Seredinski; Hengming Li; Yash Mehta; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Ivan Borzenets; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Andrew Seredinski; Anne Draelos; Ming-Tso Wei; Chung-Ting Ke; Tate Fleming; Yash Mehta; Ethan Mancil; Hengming Li; Takashi Taniguchi; Kenji Watanabe; Seigo Tarucha; Michihisa Yamamoto; Ivan Borzenets; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Ming-Tso Wei; Anne Draelos; Andrew Seredinski; Chung-Ting Ke; Yash Mehta; Ethan Mancil; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Michihisa Yamamoto; Seigo Tarucha; Ivan Borzenets; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Anne Draelos; Ming-Tso Wei; Andrew Seredinski; Chung-Ting Ke; Hengming Li; Yash Mehta; Ethan Mancil; Tate Fleming; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Michihisa Yamamoto; Seigo Tarucha; Ivan Borzenets; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Ming-Tso Wei; Chung Ting Ke; Anne Draelos; Andrew Seredinski; Ivan Borzenets; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; R. S. Deacon; Michihisa Yamamoto; Yuriy Bomze; Seigo Tarucha; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Anne Draelos; Chung-Ting Ke; Ivan Borzenets; Ming-Tso Wei; Andrew Seredenski; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; R. S. Deacon; Michihisa Yamamoto; Yuriy Bomze; Seigo Tarucha; Francois Amet; Gleb Finkelstein