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Dive into the research topics where Leo P. Kouwenhoven is active.

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Featured researches published by Leo P. Kouwenhoven.


Nature | 2018

Quantized Majorana conductance

Hao Zhang; Chun Xiao Liu; Sasa Gazibegovic; Di Xu; John Logan; Guanzhong Wang; Nick van Loo; Jouri Bommer; Michiel de Moor; Diana Car; Roy Op het Veld; Petrus van Veldhoven; Sebastian Koelling; Marcel A. Verheijen; Mihir Pendharkar; Daniel Pennachio; Borzoyeh Shojaei; Joon Sue Lee; Chris J. Palmstrøm; Erik P. A. M. Bakkers; S. Das Sarma; Leo P. Kouwenhoven

Majorana zero-modes—a type of localized quasiparticle—hold great promise for topological quantum computing. Tunnelling spectroscopy in electrical transport is the primary tool for identifying the presence of Majorana zero-modes, for instance as a zero-bias peak in differential conductance. The height of the Majorana zero-bias peak is predicted to be quantized at the universal conductance value of 2e2/h at zero temperature (where e is the charge of an electron and h is the Planck constant), as a direct consequence of the famous Majorana symmetry in which a particle is its own antiparticle. The Majorana symmetry protects the quantization against disorder, interactions and variations in the tunnel coupling. Previous experiments, however, have mostly shown zero-bias peaks much smaller than 2e2/h, with a recent observation of a peak height close to 2e2/h. Here we report a quantized conductance plateau at 2e2/h in the zero-bias conductance measured in indium antimonide semiconductor nanowires covered with an aluminium superconducting shell. The height of our zero-bias peak remains constant despite changing parameters such as the magnetic field and tunnel coupling, indicating that it is a quantized conductance plateau. We distinguish this quantized Majorana peak from possible non-Majorana origins by investigating its robustness to electric and magnetic fields as well as its temperature dependence. The observation of a quantized conductance plateau strongly supports the existence of Majorana zero-modes in the system, consequently paving the way for future braiding experiments that could lead to topological quantum computing.


Nature Reviews Materials | 2018

Majorana zero modes in superconductor–semiconductor heterostructures

Roman M. Lutchyn; Erik P. A. M. Bakkers; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Peter Krogstrup; C. M. Marcus; Yuval Oreg

Realizing topological superconductivity and Majorana zero modes in the laboratory is a major goal in condensed-matter physics. In this Review, we survey the current status of this rapidly developing field, focusing on proposals for the realization of topological superconductivity in semiconductor–superconductor heterostructures. We examine materials science progress in growing InAs and InSb semiconductor nanowires and characterizing these systems. We then discuss the observation of robust signatures of Majorana zero modes in recent experiments, paying particular attention to zero-bias tunnelling conduction measurements and Coulomb blockade experiments. We also outline several next-generation experiments probing exotic properties of Majorana zero modes, including fusion rules and non-Abelian exchange statistics. Finally, we discuss prospects for implementing Majorana-based topological quantum computation.Realizing topological superconductivity and Majorana zero modes in the laboratory is a major goal in condensed-matter physics. In this Review, the rapidly developing field is surveyed, with a focus on the realization of topological superconductivity in semiconductor–superconductor heterostructures.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2018

Ballistic Majorana nanowire devices

Önder Gül; Hao Zhang; Jouri Bommer; Mwa de Moor; Diana Car; Sr Sebastien Plissard; Epam Erik Bakkers; Attila Geresdi; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Leo P. Kouwenhoven

Majorana modes are zero-energy excitations of a topological superconductor that exhibit non-Abelian statistics1–3. Following proposals for their detection in a semiconductor nanowire coupled to an s-wave superconductor4,5, several tunnelling experiments reported characteristic Majorana signatures6–11. Reducing disorder has been a prime challenge for these experiments because disorder can mimic the zero-energy signatures of Majoranas12–16, and renders the topological properties inaccessible17–20. Here, we show characteristic Majorana signatures in InSb nanowire devices exhibiting clear ballistic transport properties. Application of a magnetic field and spatial control of carrier density using local gates generates a zero bias peak that is rigid over a large region in the parameter space of chemical potential, Zeeman energy and tunnel barrier potential. The reduction of disorder allows us to resolve separate regions in the parameter space with and without a zero bias peak, indicating topologically distinct phases. These observations are consistent with the Majorana theory in a ballistic system21, and exclude the known alternative explanations that invoke disorder12–16 or a nonuniform chemical potential22,23.Nanowire devices exhibiting ballistic transport show characteristics of Majorana modes, ruling out alternative explanations other than topological superconductivity.


Nature | 2017

Epitaxy of advanced nanowire quantum devices

Sasa Gazibegovic; Diana Car; Hao Zhang; Stijn Balk; John Logan; Michiel de Moor; Maja Cassidy; Rudi Schmits; Di Xu; Guanzhong Wang; Peter Krogstrup; Roy Op het Veld; Kun Zuo; Yoram Vos; Jie Shen; Daniël Bouman; Borzoyeh Shojaei; Daniel Pennachio; Joon Sue Lee; Petrus van Veldhoven; Sebastian Koelling; Marcel A. Verheijen; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Chris J. Palmstrøm; Erik P. A. M. Bakkers

Semiconductor nanowires are ideal for realizing various low-dimensional quantum devices. In particular, topological phases of matter hosting non-Abelian quasiparticles (such as anyons) can emerge when a semiconductor nanowire with strong spin–orbit coupling is brought into contact with a superconductor. To exploit the potential of non-Abelian anyons—which are key elements of topological quantum computing—fully, they need to be exchanged in a well-controlled braiding operation. Essential hardware for braiding is a network of crystalline nanowires coupled to superconducting islands. Here we demonstrate a technique for generic bottom-up synthesis of complex quantum devices with a special focus on nanowire networks with a predefined number of superconducting islands. Structural analysis confirms the high crystalline quality of the nanowire junctions, as well as an epitaxial superconductor–semiconductor interface. Quantum transport measurements of nanowire ‘hashtags’ reveal Aharonov–Bohm and weak-antilocalization effects, indicating a phase-coherent system with strong spin–orbit coupling. In addition, a proximity-induced hard superconducting gap (with vanishing sub-gap conductance) is demonstrated in these hybrid superconductor–semiconductor nanowires, highlighting the successful materials development necessary for a first braiding experiment. Our approach opens up new avenues for the realization of epitaxial three-dimensional quantum architectures which have the potential to become key components of various quantum devices.


Nature Communications | 2017

Conductance through a helical state in an Indium antimonide nanowire

Jakob Kammhuber; Maja Cassidy; Fei Pei; A Vuik; Önder Gül; D. Car; Sr Sebastien Plissard; Epam Erik Bakkers; Michael Wimmer; Leo P. Kouwenhoven

The motion of an electron and its spin are generally not coupled. However in a one-dimensional material with strong spin-orbit interaction (SOI) a helical state may emerge at finite magnetic fields, where electrons of opposite spin will have opposite momentum. The existence of this helical state has applications for spin filtering and cooper pair splitter devices and is an essential ingredient for realizing topologically protected quantum computing using Majorana zero modes. Here, we report measurements of a quantum point contact in an indium antimonide nanowire. At magnetic fields exceeding 3u2009T, the 2u2009e2/h conductance plateau shows a re-entrant feature toward 1u2009e2/h which increases linearly in width with magnetic field. Rotating the magnetic field clearly attributes this experimental signature to SOI and by comparing our observations with a numerical model we extract a spin-orbit energy of approximately 6.5u2009meV, which is stronger than the spin-orbit energy obtained by other methods.Indium antimonide nanowires have large spin-orbit coupling, which can give rise to helical states that are an important part of proposals for topological quantum computing. Here the authors measure conductance through the helical states and extract a larger spin-orbit energy than obtained before.


Nature Physics | 2017

Microwave spectroscopy of spinful Andreev bound states in ballistic semiconductor Josephson junctions

David J. van Woerkom; Alex Proutski; Bernard Van Heck; Daniël Bouman; Jukka Vayrynen; Leonid I. Glazman; Peter Krogstrup; Jesper Nygård; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Attila Geresdi

The superconducting proximity effect in semiconductor nanowires has recently enabled the study of new superconducting architectures, such as gate-tunable superconducting qubits and multiterminal Josephson junctions. As opposed to their metallic counterparts, the electron density in semiconductor nanosystems is tunable by external electrostatic gates, providing a highly scalable and in situ variation of the device properties. In addition, semiconductors with large g-factor and spin–orbit coupling have been shown to give rise to exotic phenomena in superconductivity, such as φ0 Josephson junctions and the emergence of Majorana bound states. Here, we report microwave spectroscopy measurements that directly reveal the presence of Andreev bound states (ABS) in ballistic semiconductor channels. We show that the measured ABS spectra are the result of transport channels with gate-tunable, high transmission probabilities up to 0.9, which is required for gate-tunable Andreev qubits and beneficial for braiding schemes of Majorana states. For the first time, we detect excitations of a spin-split pair of ABS and observe symmetry-broken ABS, a direct consequence of the spin–orbit coupling in the semiconductor. Andreev bound states in semiconductor–superconductor hybrid structures are studied using microwave spectroscopyxa0—xa0a tool that could be also used for investigating Majorana modes.


Nano Letters | 2017

Observation of conductance quantization in InSb nanowire networks

Elham M. T. Fadaly; Hao Zhang; Sonia Conesa-Boj; Diana Car; Önder Gül; Sr Sebastien Plissard; Roy Op het Veld; Sebastian Kölling; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Erik P. A. M. Bakkers

Majorana zero modes (MZMs) are prime candidates for robust topological quantum bits, holding a great promise for quantum computing. Semiconducting nanowires with strong spin orbit coupling offer a promising platform to harness one-dimensional electron transport for Majorana physics. Demonstrating the topological nature of MZMs relies on braiding, accomplished by moving MZMs around each other in a certain sequence. Most of the proposed Majorana braiding circuits require nanowire networks with minimal disorder. Here, the electronic transport across a junction between two merged InSb nanowires is studied to investigate how disordered these nanowire networks are. Conductance quantization plateaus are observed in most of the contact pairs of the epitaxial InSb nanowire networks: the hallmark of ballistic transport behavior.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Supercurrent interference in few-mode nanowire Josephson junctions

Kun Zuo; Vincent Mourik; Daniel Szombati; Bas Nijholt; D.J. van Woerkom; Attila Geresdi; Jun Chen; Viacheslav P. Ostroukh; A. R. Akhmerov; Sr Sebastien Plissard; D. Car; Erik P. A. M. Bakkers; Dmitry I. Pikulin; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Sergey Frolov

Junctions created by coupling two superconductors via a semiconductor nanowire in the presence of high magnetic fields are the basis for the potential detection, fusion, and braiding of Majorana bound states. We study NbTiN/InSb nanowire/NbTiN Josephson junctions and find that the dependence of the critical current on the magnetic field exhibits gate-tunable nodes. This is in contrast with a well-known Fraunhofer effect, under which critical current nodes form a regular pattern with a period fixed by the junction area. Based on a realistic numerical model we conclude that the Zeeman effect induced by the magnetic field and the spin-orbit interaction in the nanowire are insufficient to explain the observed evolution of the Josephson effect. We find the interference between the few occupied one-dimensional modes in the nanowire to be the dominant mechanism responsible for the critical current behavior. We also report a strong suppression of critical currents at finite magnetic fields that should be taken into account when designing circuits based on Majorana bound states.


Physical Review B | 2017

Josephson radiation and shot noise of a semiconductor nanowire junction

D.J. van Woerkom; Alexander Proutski; R.J.J. van Gulik; Tamas Krivachy; D. Car; Sr Sebastien Plissard; Erik P. A. M. Bakkers; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Attila Geresdi

We measured the Josephson radiation emitted by an InSb semiconductor nanowire junction utilizing photon-assisted quasiparticle tunneling in an ac-coupled superconducting tunnel junction. We quantify the action of the local microwave environment by evaluating the frequency dependence of the inelastic Cooper-pair tunneling of the nanowire junction and find the zero-frequency impedance Z(0)=492Ω with a cutoff frequency of f0=33.1GHz. We extract a circuit coupling efficiency of η≈0.1 and a detector quantum efficiency approaching unity in the high-frequency limit. In addition to the Josephson radiation, we identify a shot noise contribution with a Fano factor F≈1, consistently with the presence of single electron states in the nanowire channel.


Physical Review B | 2017

Spin-orbit interaction in a dual gated InAs/GaSb quantum well

Arjan J. A. Beukman; Folkert K. de Vries; Jasper van Veen; Rafal Skolasinski; Michael Wimmer; Fanming Qu; David de Vries; Binh Minh Nguyen; Wei Yi; Andrey A. Kiselev; Marko Sokolich; Michael J. Manfra; Fabrizio Nichele; C. M. Marcus; Leo P. Kouwenhoven

The spin-orbit interaction is investigated in a dual gated InAs/GaSb quantum well. Using an electric field, the quantum well can be tuned between a single-carrier regime with exclusively electrons as carriers and a two-carrier regime where electrons and holes coexist. The spin-orbit interaction in both regimes manifests itself as a beating in the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations. In the single-carrier regime the linear Dresselhaus strength is characterized by β=28.5 meV A and the Rashba coefficient α is tuned from 75 to 53 meV A by changing the electric field. In the two-carrier regime a quenching of the spin splitting is observed and attributed to a crossing of spin bands.

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Erik P. A. M. Bakkers

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Diana Car

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Hao Zhang

Delft University of Technology

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Roy Op het Veld

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Attila Geresdi

Delft University of Technology

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Marcel A. Verheijen

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Önder Gül

Delft University of Technology

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Michael Wimmer

Vienna University of Technology

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D. Car

Delft University of Technology

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