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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Bena is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Bena.


New Journal of Physics | 2009

Remarks on the tight-binding model of graphene

Cristina Bena

We address a simple but fundamental issue arising in the study of graphene, as well as of other systems that have a crystalline structure with more than one atom per unit cell. For these systems, the choice of the tight- binding basis is not unique. For monolayer graphene two bases are widely used in the literature. While the expectation values of operators describing physical quantities should be independent of basis, the form of the operators may depend on the basis, especially in the presence of disorder or of anapplied magneticfield. Using an inappropriate form of certain operators may lead to erroneous physical predictions. We discuss the two bases used to describe monolayer graphene, as well as the form of the most commonly used operators in the two bases. We repeat our analysis for the case of bilayer graphene.


Nature Physics | 2013

Spin imbalance and spin-charge separation in a mesoscopic superconductor

Charis Quay; Denis Chevallier; Cristina Bena; M. Aprili

Injection of spin-polarized electrons into a superconductor leads to both spin and charge imbalance. If charge relaxation occurs faster than spin relaxation, it is possible to observe excess spin at almost no extra charge.


Physical Review B | 2012

Mutation of Andreev into Majorana bound states in long superconductor-normal and superconductor-normal-superconductor junctions

Denis Chevallier; Doru Sticlet; Pascal Simon; Cristina Bena

We study one-dimensional topological SN and SNS long junctions obtained by placing a topological insulating nanowire in the proximity of either one or two SC finite-size leads. Using the Majorana Polarization order parameter (MP) introduced in Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 096802 (2012), we find that the extended Andreev bound states (ABS) of the normal part of the wire acquire a finite MP: for a finite-size SN junction the ABS spectrum exhibits a zero-energy extended state which carries a full Majorana fermion, while the ABS of long SNS junctions with phase difference π transform into two zero-energy states carrying two Majorana fermions with the same MP. Given their extended character inside the whole normal link, and not only close to an interface, these Majorana-Andreev states can be directly detected in tunneling spectroscopy experiments.


Physical Review B | 2013

From Andreev bound states to Majorana fermions in topological wires on superconducting substrates: A story of mutation

Denis Chevallier; P. Simon; Cristina Bena

We study the proximity effect in a topological nanowire tunnel coupled to an s-wave superconducting substrate. We use a general Greens function approach that allows us to study the evolution of the Andreev bound states in the wire into Majorana fermions. We show that the strength of the tunnel coupling induces a topological transition in which the Majorana fermionic states can be destroyed when the coupling is very strong. Moreover, we provide a phenomenologial study of the effects of disorder in the superconductor on the formation of Majorana fermions. We note a non-trivial effect of a quasiparticle broadening term which can take the wire from a topological into a non-topological phase in certain ranges of parameters. Our results have also direct consequences for a nanowire coupled to an inhomogenous superconductor.


European Physical Journal B | 2014

Majorana fermions in honeycomb lattices

C. Dutreix; Marine Guigou; Denis Chevallier; Cristina Bena

We study the formation of Majorana fermions in honeycomb-lattice structures in the presence of a Zeeman field, Rashba spin-orbit coupling, and in the proximity of an s-wave superconductor. We show that an exact mapping exists between an anisotropic hexagonal-lattice nanoribbon at k = 0 and a one-dimensional chain, for which the existence of Majorana fermions has been extensively discussed. Consequently we can find the conditions for the emergence of Majorana fermions in such a ribbon for particular values of the chemical potential such as the top or the bottom of the band, and the Van Hove singularities, and relate the existence of Majoranas to a band inversion in the bulk band structure. Moreover we find that similar situations arise in anisotropic lattices and we give some examples which show the formation of Majorana fermions in these structures.


Physical Review B | 2009

Green’s functions and impurity scattering in graphene

Cristina Bena

We present the complete formalism that describes scattering in graphene at lowenergies. We begin by analyzing the real-space free Green’s function matrix, and its analytical expansions at low-energy, carefully incorporating the discrete lattice structure, and arbitrary forms of the atomic-orbital wave function. We then compute the real-space Green’s function in the presence of an impurity. We express our results both in 2×2 and 4×4 forms (for the two sublattices and the two inequivalent valleys of the first Brillouin zone). We compare this with the 4 × 4 formalism proposed in Refs. [1, 2], and show that the latter is incomplete. We describe how it can be adapted to accurately take into account the effects of inter-valley scattering on spatially-varying quantities such as the local density of states.


Physical Review B | 2010

Tunneling conductance between a superconducting STM tip and an out-of-equilibrium Luttinger liquid

Cristina Bena

We calculate the current and differential conductance for the junction between a superconducting (SC) STM tip and a Luttinger liquid (LL). For an infinite single-channel LL, the SC coherence peaks are preserved in the tunneling conductance for interactions weaker than a critical value, while for strong interactions (g <0.38), they disappear and are replaced by cusp-like features. For a finite-size wire in contact with non-interacting leads, we find however that the peaks are restored even for extremely strong interactions. In the presence of a source-drain voltage the peaks/cusps split, and the split is equal to the voltage. At zero temperature, even very strong interactions do not smear the two peaks into a broader one; this implies that the recent experiments of Y.-F. Chen et. al. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 036804 (2009)) do not rule out the existence of strong interactions in carbon nanotubes.


Physical Review B | 2016

Determining the spin-orbit coupling via spin-polarized spectroscopy of magnetic impurities

Vardan Kaladzhyan; Pascal Simon; Cristina Bena

We study the spin-resolved spectral properties of the impurity states associated to the presence of magnetic impurities in two-dimensional, as well as one-dimensional systems with Rashba spin-orbit coupling. We focus on Shiba bound states in superconducting materials, as well as on impurity states in metallic systems. Using a combination of a numerical T-matrix approximation and a direct analytical calculation of the bound state wave function, we compute the local density of states (LDOS) together with its Fourier transform (FT). We find that the FT of the spin-polarized LDOS, a quantity accessible via spin-polarized STM, allows to accurately extract the strength of the spin-orbit coupling. Also we confirm that the presence of magnetic impurities is strictly necessary for such measurement, and that non-spin-polarized experiments cannot have access to the value of the spin-orbit coupling.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2016

Asymptotic behavior of impurity-induced bound states in low-dimensional topological superconductors

Vardan Kaladzhyan; Cristina Bena; Pascal Simon

We study theoretically the asymptotic behavior of the Shiba bound states associated with magnetic impurities embedded in both 2D and 1D anomalous superconductors. We calculate analytically the spatial dependence of the local density of states together with the spin polarization associated with the Shiba bound states. We show that the latter quantity exhibits drastic differences between s-wave and different types of p-wave superconductors. Such properties, which could be measured using spin-polarized STM, offer therefore a way to discriminate between singlet and triplet pairing in low-dimensional superconductors, as well as a way to estimate the amplitude of the triplet pairing in these systems.


Physical Review B | 2013

Effects of finite superconducting coherence lengths and of phase gradients in topological SN and SNS junctions and rings

Denis Chevallier; Doru Sticlet; Pascal Simon; Cristina Bena

We study the effect of a finite proximity superconducting (SC) coherence length in SN and SNS junctions consisting of a semiconducting topological insulating wire whose ends are connected to either one or two s-wave superconductors. We find that such systems behave exactly as SN and SNS junctions made from a single wire for which some regions are sitting on top of superconductors, the size of the topological SC region being determined by the SC coherence length. We also analyze the effect of a non-perfect transmission at the NS interface on the spatial extension of the Majorana fermions. Moreover, we study the effects of continuous phase gradients in both an open and closed (ring) SNS junction. We find that such phase gradients play an important role in the spatial localization of the Majorana fermions.

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Pascal Simon

University of Paris-Sud

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C. Dutreix

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Charis Quay

Université Paris-Saclay

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M. Aprili

University of Paris-Sud

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Ines Safi

University of Paris-Sud

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