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Dive into the research topics where Eric Spanton is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Spanton.


Nature Materials | 2013

Imaging currents in HgTe quantum wells in the quantum spin Hall regime

Katja C. Nowack; Eric Spanton; Matthias Baenninger; Markus König; J. R. Kirtley; Beena Kalisky; C. Ames; Philipp Leubner; Christoph Brüne; H. Buhmann; L. W. Molenkamp; David Goldhaber-Gordon; Kathryn A. Moler

The quantum spin Hall (QSH) state is a state of matter characterized by a non-trivial topology of its band structure, and associated conducting edge channels. The QSH state was predicted and experimentally demonstrated to be realized in HgTe quantum wells. The existence of the edge channels has been inferred from local and non-local transport measurements in sufficiently small devices. Here we directly confirm the existence of the edge channels by imaging the magnetic fields produced by current flowing in large Hall bars made from HgTe quantum wells. These images distinguish between current that passes through each edge and the bulk. On tuning the bulk conductivity by gating or raising the temperature, we observe a regime in which the edge channels clearly coexist with the conducting bulk, providing input to the question of how ballistic transport may be limited in the edge channels. Our results represent a versatile method for characterization of new QSH materials systems.


Nature Materials | 2013

Locally enhanced conductivity due to the tetragonal domain structure in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 heterointerfaces.

Beena Kalisky; Eric Spanton; Hilary Noad; J. R. Kirtley; Katja C. Nowack; C. Bell; Hiroki Sato; Masayuki Hosoda; Yanwu Xie; Yasuyuki Hikita; Carsten Woltmann; Georg Pfanzelt; Rainer Jany; Christoph Richter; Harold Y. Hwang; J. Mannhart; Kathryn A. Moler

The ability to control materials properties through interface engineering is demonstrated by the appearance of conductivity at the interface of certain insulators, most famously the {001} interface of the band insulators LaAlO3 and TiO2-terminated SrTiO3 (STO; refs 1, 2). Transport and other measurements in this system show a plethora of diverse physical phenomena. To better understand the interface conductivity, we used scanning superconducting quantum interference device microscopy to image the magnetic field locally generated by current in an interface. At low temperature, we found that the current flowed in conductive narrow paths oriented along the crystallographic axes, embedded in a less conductive background. The configuration of these paths changed on thermal cycling above the STO cubic-to-tetragonal structural transition temperature, implying that the local conductivity is strongly modified by the STO tetragonal domain structure. The interplay between substrate domains and the interface provides an additional mechanism for understanding and controlling the behaviour of heterostructures.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Images of Edge Current in InAs/GaSb Quantum Wells

Eric Spanton; Katja C. Nowack; Lingjie Du; Gerard Sullivan; Rui-Rui Du; Kathryn A. Moler

Quantum spin Hall devices with edges much longer than several microns do not display ballistic transport; that is, their measured conductances are much less than e(2)/h per edge. We imaged edge currents in InAs/GaSb quantum wells with long edges and determined an effective edge resistance. Surprisingly, although the effective edge resistance is much greater than h/e(2), it is independent of temperature up to 30 K within experimental resolution. Known candidate scattering mechanisms do not explain our observation of an effective edge resistance that is large yet temperature independent.


Nature | 2017

Tunable interacting composite fermion phases in a half-filled bilayer-graphene Landau level

Alexander A. Zibrov; Carlos Kometter; Haoxin Zhou; Eric Spanton; Takashi Taniguchi; Kenji Watanabe; Michael P. Zaletel; Andrea Young

A.A. Zibrov,1 C. Kometter,1 H. Zhou,1 E.M. Spanton,2 T. Taniguchi,3 K. Watanabe,3 M. P. Zaletel,4 and A.F. Young1 Department of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara CA 93106 USA California Nanosystems Institute, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106 Advanced Materials Laboratory, National Institute for Materials Science, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0044, Japan Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA (Dated: May 2, 2017)Non-Abelian anyons are a type of quasiparticle with the potential to encode quantum information in topological qubits protected from decoherence. Experimental systems that are predicted to harbour non-Abelian anyons include p-wave superfluids, superconducting systems with strong spin–orbit coupling, and paired states of interacting composite fermions that emerge at even denominators in the fractional quantum Hall (FQH) regime. Although even-denominator FQH states have been observed in several two-dimensional systems, small energy gaps and limited tunability have stymied definitive experimental probes of their non-Abelian nature. Here we report the observation of robust even-denominator FQH phases at half-integer Landau-level filling in van der Waals heterostructures consisting of dual-gated, hexagonal-boron-nitride-encapsulated bilayer graphene. The measured energy gap is three times larger than observed previously. We compare these FQH phases with numerical and theoretical models while simultaneously controlling the carrier density, layer polarization and magnetic field, and find evidence for the paired Pfaffian phase that is predicted to host non-Abelian anyons. Electric-field-controlled level crossings between states with different Landau-level indices reveal a cascade of FQH phase transitions, including a continuous phase transition between the even-denominator FQH state and a compressible composite fermion liquid. Our results establish graphene as a pristine and tunable experimental platform for studying the interplay between topology and quantum criticality, and for detecting non-Abelian qubits.


New Journal of Physics | 2016

Edge Transport in the Trivial Phase of InAs/GaSb

Fabrizio Nichele; Henri J. Suominen; Morten Kjaergaard; C. M. Marcus; Ebrahim Sajadi; J. A. Folk; Fanming Qu; Arjan J. A. Beukman; Folkert K. de Vries; Jasper van Veen; Stevan Nadj-Perge; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Binh-Minh Nguyen; Andrey A. Kiselev; Wei Yi; Marko Sokolich; Michael J. Manfra; Eric Spanton; Kathryn A. Moler

We present transport and scanning SQUID measurements on InAs/GaSb double quantum wells, a system predicted to be a two-dimensional topological insulator. Top and back gates allow independent control of density and band offset, allowing tuning from the trivial to the topological regime. In the trivial regime, bulk conductivity is quenched but transport persists along the edges, superficially resembling the predicted helical edge-channels in the topological regime. We characterize edge conduction in the trivial regime in a wide variety of sample geometries and measurement configurations, as a function of temperature, magnetic field, and edge length. Despite similarities to studies claiming measurements of helical edge channels, our characterization points to a non-topological origin for these observations.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Scanning SQUID susceptometers with sub-micron spatial resolution

J. R. Kirtley; Lisa Maria Paulius; Aaron J. Rosenberg; Johanna C. Palmstrom; Connor M. Holland; Eric Spanton; Daniel Schiessl; Colin Jermain; Jonathan Gibbons; Y.-K.-K. Fung; M. E. Huber; D. C. Ralph; Mark B. Ketchen; Gerald W. Gibson; Kathryn A. Moler

Superconducting QUantum Interference Device (SQUID) microscopy has excellent magnetic field sensitivity, but suffers from modest spatial resolution when compared with other scanning probes. This spatial resolution is determined by both the size of the field sensitive area and the spacing between this area and the sample surface. In this paper we describe scanning SQUID susceptometers that achieve sub-micron spatial resolution while retaining a white noise floor flux sensitivity of ≈2μΦ0/Hz1/2. This high spatial resolution is accomplished by deep sub-micron feature sizes, well shielded pickup loops fabricated using a planarized process, and a deep etch step that minimizes the spacing between the sample surface and the SQUID pickup loop. We describe the design, modeling, fabrication, and testing of these sensors. Although sub-micron spatial resolution has been achieved previously in scanning SQUID sensors, our sensors not only achieve high spatial resolution but also have integrated modulation coils for flux feedback, integrated field coils for susceptibility measurements, and batch processing. They are therefore a generally applicable tool for imaging sample magnetization, currents, and susceptibilities with higher spatial resolution than previous susceptometers.


Physical Review B | 2016

Variation in superconducting transition temperature due to tetragonal domains in two-dimensionally doped SrTiO3

Hilary Noad; Eric Spanton; Katja C. Nowack; Hisashi Inoue; Minu Kim; Tyler A. Merz; C. Bell; Yasuyuki Hikita; Ruqing Xu; Wenjun Liu; Arturas Vailionis; Harold Y. Hwang; Kathryn A. Moler

Strontium titanate is a low-temperature, non-Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer superconductor that superconducts to carrier concentrations lower than in any other system and exhibits avoided ferroelectricity at low temperatures. Neither the mechanism of superconductivity in strontium titanate nor the importance of the structure and dielectric properties for the superconductivity are well understood. We studied the effects of twin structure on superconductivity in a 5.5-nm-thick layer of niobium-doped SrTiO3 embedded in undoped SrTiO3. We used a scanning superconducting quantum interference device susceptometer to image the local diamagnetic response of the sample as a function of temperature. We observed regions that exhibited a superconducting transition temperature T-c greater than or similar to 10% higher than the temperature at which the sample was fully superconducting. The pattern of these regions varied spatially in a manner characteristic of structural twin domains. Some regions are too wide to originate on twin boundaries; therefore, we propose that the orientation of the tetragonal unit cell with respect to the doped plane affects T-c. Our results suggest that the anisotropic dielectric properties of SrTiO3 are important for its superconductivity and need to be considered in any theory of the mechanism of the superconductivity.


Nature Physics | 2017

Current–phase relations of few-mode InAs nanowire Josephson junctions

Eric Spanton; Mingtang Deng; S. Vaitiekėnas; Peter Krogstrup; Jesper Nygård; C. M. Marcus; Kathryn A. Moler

Semiconductor nanowires with superconducting leads are considered promising for quantum computation. The current–phase relation is systematically explored in gate-tunable InAs Josephson junctions, and is shown to provide a clean handle for characterizing the transport properties of these structures. Gate-tunable semiconductor nanowires with superconducting leads have great potential for quantum computation1,2,3 and as model systems for mesoscopic Josephson junctions4,5. The supercurrent, I, versus the phase, φ, across the junction is called the current–phase relation (CPR). It can reveal not only the amplitude of the critical current, but also the number of modes and their transmission. We measured the CPR of many individual InAs nanowire Josephson junctions, one junction at a time. Both the amplitude and shape of the CPR varied between junctions, with small critical currents and skewed CPRs indicating few-mode junctions with high transmissions. In a gate-tunable junction, we found that the CPR varied with gate voltage: near the onset of supercurrent, we observed behaviour consistent with resonant tunnelling through a single, highly transmitting mode. The gate dependence is consistent with modelled subband structure that includes an effective tunnelling barrier due to an abrupt change in the Fermi level at the boundary of the gate-tuned region. These measurements of skewed, tunable, few-mode CPRs are promising both for applications that require anharmonic junctions6,7 and for Majorana readout proposals8.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2015

Electric coupling in scanning SQUID measurements

Eric Spanton; Aaron J. Rosenberg; Yihua H. Wang; J. R. Kirtley; Ferhat Katmis; Pablo Jarillo-Herrero; Jagadeesh S. Moodera; Kathryn A. Moler

Scanning SQUID is a local magnetometer which can image flux through its pickup loop due to DC magnetic fields (


arXiv: Strongly Correlated Electrons | 2018

Fractional Chern insulator edges and layer-resolved lattice contacts

Christina Knapp; Eric Spanton; Andrea Young; Chetan Nayak; Michael P. Zaletel

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Katja C. Nowack

Delft University of Technology

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Harold Y. Hwang

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Yasuyuki Hikita

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Kenji Watanabe

National Institute for Materials Science

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Takashi Taniguchi

National Institute for Materials Science

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Haoxin Zhou

University of California

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