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Dive into the research topics where C. W. J. Beenakker is active.

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Featured researches published by C. W. J. Beenakker.


EPL | 1988

Coherent Electron Focussing in a Two-Dimensional Electron Gas.

H. van Houten; van Bart Wees; J.E. Mooij; C. W. J. Beenakker; J.G. Williamson; C.T. Foxon

The first experimental realization of ballistic point contacts in a two-dimensional electron gas for the study of transverse electron focussing by a magnetic field is reported. Multiple peaks associated with skipping orbits of electrons reflected specularly by the channel boundary are observed. At low temperatures fine structure in the focussing spectra is seen.


Nature Physics | 2007

Valley filter and valley valve in graphene

Adam Rycerz; J. Tworzyd lstrok; C. W. J. Beenakker

The potential of graphene for carbon electronics rests on the possibilities offered by its unusual band structure to create devices that have no analogue in silicon-based electronics1,2. Conduction and valence bands in graphene form conically shaped valleys, touching at a point called the Dirac point. There are two inequivalent Dirac points in the Brillouin zone, related by time-reversal symmetry. Intervalley scattering is suppressed in pure samples3,4,5. The independence and degeneracy of the valley degree of freedom suggests that it might be used to control an electronic device6, in much the same way as the electron spin is used in spintronics7 or quantum computing8. A key ingredient for ‘valleytronics’ would be a controllable way of occupying a single valley in graphene, thereby producing a valley polarization. Here we propose such a valley filter, based on a ballistic point contact with zigzag edges. The polarity can be inverted by local application of a gate voltage to the point contact region. Two valley filters in series may function as an electrostatically controlled valley valve, representing a zero-magnetic-field counterpart to the familiar spin valve.


Reviews of Modern Physics | 2008

Colloquium: Andreev reflection and Klein tunneling in graphene

C. W. J. Beenakker

A colloquium-style introduction to two electronic processes in a carbon monolayer (graphene) is presented, each having an analog in relativistic quantum mechanics. Both processes couple electronlike and holelike states, through the action of either a superconducting pair potential or an electrostatic potential. The first process, Andreev reflection, is the electron-to-hole conversion at the interface with a superconductor. The second process, Klein tunneling, is the tunneling through a


Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics | 2013

Search for Majorana fermions in superconductors

C. W. J. Beenakker

p\text{\ensuremath{-}}n


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Sub-Poissonian Shot Noise in Graphene

J. Tworzydlo; Björn Trauzettel; M. Titov; Adam Rycerz; C. W. J. Beenakker

junction. The absence of backscattering, characteristic of massless Dirac fermions, implies that both processes happen with unit efficiency at normal incidence. Away from normal incidence, retro-reflection in the first process corresponds to negative refraction in the second process. In the quantum Hall effect, both Andreev reflection and Klein tunneling induce the same dependence of the two-terminal conductance plateau on the valley isospin of the carriers. Existing and proposed experiments on Josephson junctions and bipolar junctions in graphene are discussed from a unified perspective.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Specular Andreev reflection in graphene

C. W. J. Beenakker

Majorana fermions (particles that are their own antiparticle) may or may not exist in nature as elementary building blocks, but in condensed matter they can be constructed out of electron and hole excitations. What is needed is a superconductor to hide the charge difference and a topological (Berry) phase to eliminate the energy difference from zero-point motion. A pair of widely separated Majorana fermions, bound to magnetic or electrostatic defects, has non-Abelian exchange statistics. A qubit encoded in this Majorana pair is expected to have an unusually long coherence time. I discuss strategies to detect Majorana fermions in a topological superconductor, as well as possible applications in a quantum computer. The status of the experimental search is reviewed.


Physical Review Letters | 1995

ANDREEV REFLECTION IN FERROMAGNET-SUPERCONDUCTOR JUNCTIONS

M. J. M. de Jong; C. W. J. Beenakker

We calculate the mode-dependent transmission probability of massless Dirac fermions through an ideal strip of graphene (length L, width W, no impurities or defects), to obtain the conductance and shot noise as a function of Fermi energy. We find that the minimum conductivity of order e^2/h at the Dirac point (when the electron and hole excitations are degenerate) is associated with a maximum of the Fano factor (the ratio of noise power and mean current). For short and wide graphene strips the Fano factor at the Dirac point equals 1/3, three times smaller than for a Poisson process. This is the same value as for a disordered metal, which is remarkable since the classical dynamics of the Dirac fermions is ballistic.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Electrically detected interferometry of Majorana fermions in a topological insulator

A. R. Akhmerov; Johan Nilsson; C. W. J. Beenakker

By combining the Dirac equation of relativistic quantum mechanics with the Bogoliubov-de Gennes equation of superconductivity we investigate the electron-hole conversion at a normal-metal-superconductor interface in graphene. We find that the Andreev reflection of Dirac fermions has several unusual features: (1) the electron and hole occupy different valleys of the band structure; (2) at normal incidence the electron-hole conversion happens with unit efficiency in spite of the large mismatch in Fermi wavelengths at the two sides of the interface; and, most fundamentally: (3) away from normal incidence the reflection angle may be the same as the angle of incidence (retroreflection) or it may be inverted (specular reflection). Specular Andreev reflection dominates in weakly doped graphene, when the Fermi wavelength in the normal region is large compared to the superconducting coherence length.


Physica A-statistical Mechanics and Its Applications | 1984

Diffusion of spheres in a concentrated suspension II

C. W. J. Beenakker; P. Mazur

The transport properties of a ferromagnet-superconductor (FS) junction are studied in a scattering formulation. Andreev reflection at the FS interface is strongly affected by the exchange interaction in the ferromagnet. The conductance G_FS of a ballistic point contact between F and S can be both larger or smaller than the value G_FN with the superconductor in the normal state, depending on the ratio of the exchange and Fermi energies. If the ferromagnet contains a tunnel barrier (I), the conductance G_FIFS exhibits resonances which do not vanish in linear response -- in contrast to the Tomasch oscillations for non-ferromagnetic materials.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 1986

Ewald sum of the Rotne–Prager tensor

C. W. J. Beenakker

Majorana fermions are zero-energy quasiparticles that may exist in superconducting vortices and interfaces, but their detection is problematic since they have no charge. This is an obstacle to the realization of topological quantum computation, which relies on Majorana fermions to store qubits in a way which is insensitive to decoherence. We show how a pair of neutral Majorana fermions can be converted reversibly into a charged Dirac fermion. These two types of fermions are predicted to exist on the metallic surface of a topological insulator (such as Bi2Se3). Our Dirac-Majorana fermion converter enables electrical detection of a qubit by an interferometric measurement.

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Piet W. Brouwer

Free University of Berlin

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C.T. Foxon

University of Nottingham

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