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Dive into the research topics where Thilo Bauch is active.

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Featured researches published by Thilo Bauch.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Tuning the field in a microwave resonator faster than the photon lifetime

Martin Sandberg; Christopher Wilson; Fredrik Persson; Thilo Bauch; Göran Johansson; Vitaly Shumeiko; Tim Duty; Per Delsing

We have fabricated and characterized tunable superconducting transmission line resonators. To change the resonance frequency, we modify the boundary condition at one end of the resonator through the tunable Josephson inductance of a superconducting quantum interference device. We demonstrate a large tuning range (several hundred megahertz), high quality factors (104), and that we can change the frequency of a few-photon field on a time scale orders of magnitude faster than the photon lifetime of the resonator. This demonstration has implications in a variety of applications.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Collapse of thermal activation in moderately damped Josephson junctions

Vladimir M. Krasnov; Thilo Bauch; Samuel Intiso; E. Hürfeld; Tatsushi Akazaki; Hideaki Takayanagi; Per Delsing

We study switching current statistics in different moderately damped Josephson junctions: a paradoxical collapse of the thermal activation with increasing temperature is reported and explained by interplay of two conflicting consequences of thermal fluctuations, which can both assist in premature escape and help in retrapping back into the stationary state. We analyze the influence of dissipation on the thermal escape by tuning the damping parameter with a gate voltage, magnetic field, temperature and an in-situ capacitor.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2012

Magnetic field resilient superconducting fractal resonators for coupling to free spins

S. E. de Graaf; Andrey Danilov; Astghik Adamyan; Thilo Bauch; Sergey Kubatkin

We demonstrate a planar superconducting microwave resonator intended for use in applications requiring strong magnetic fields and high quality factors. In perpendicular magnetic fields of 20 mT, the niobium resonators maintain a quality factor above 25 000 over a wide range of applied powers, down to single photon population. In parallel field, the same quality factor is observed above 160 mT, the field required for coupling to free spins at a typical operating frequency of 5 GHz. We attribute the increased performance to the current branching in the fractal design. We demonstrate that our device can be used for spectroscopy by measuring the dissipation from a pico-mole of molecular spins.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2013

Fully gapped superconductivity in a nanometre-size YBa2Cu3O7-[delta] island enhanced by a magnetic field

David Gustafsson; Dmitry Golubev; Mikael Fogelström; T. Claeson; Sergey Kubatkin; Thilo Bauch; Floriana Lombardi

The symmetry of Cooper pairs is central to constructing a superconducting state. The demonstration of a d(x²-y²)-wave order parameter with nodes represented a breakthrough for high critical temperature superconductors (HTSs). However, despite this fundamental discovery, the origin of superconductivity remains elusive, raising the question of whether something is missing from the global picture. Deviations from d(x²-y²)-wave symmetry, such as an imaginary admixture d(x²-y²)+ is (or id(xy)), predict a ground state with unconventional properties exhibiting a full superconducting gap and time reversal symmetry breaking. The existence of such a state, until now highly controversial, can be proved by highly sensitive measurements of the excitation spectrum. Here, we present a spectroscopic technique based on an HTS nanoscale device that allows an unprecedented energy resolution thanks to Coulomb blockade effects, a regime practically inaccessible in these materials previously. We find that the energy required to add an extra electron depends on the parity (odd/even) of the excess electrons on the island and increases with magnetic field. This is inconsistent with a pure d(x²-y²)-wave symmetry and demonstrates a complex order parameter component that needs to be incorporated into any theoretical model of HTS.


Physical Review B | 2007

Anticorrelation between temperature and fluctuations of the switching current in moderately damped Josephson junctions

Vladimir M. Krasnov; Taras Golod; Thilo Bauch; Per Delsing

We study the influence of dissipation on the switching current statistics of moderately damped Josephson junctions. Different types of both lowand highTc junctions with controlled damping are studied. The damping parameter of the junctions is tuned in a wide range by changing temperature, magnetic field, gate voltage, introducing a ferromagnetic layer or in-situ capacitive shunting. A paradoxical collapse of switching current fluctuations occurs with increasing T in all studied junctions. The phenomenon critically depends on dissipation in the junction and is explained by interplay of two counteracting consequences of thermal fluctuations, which on the one hand assist in premature switching into the resistive state and on the other hand help in retrapping back to the superconducting state. This is one of the rare examples of anticorrelation between temperature and fluctuation amplitude of a physically measurable quantity.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Are "Pinholes" the Cause of Excess Current in Superconducting Tunnel Junctions? A Study of Andreev Current in Highly Resistive Junctions

Tine Greibe; Markku Stenberg; Christopher Wilson; Thilo Bauch; Vitaly Shumeiko; Per Delsing

In highly resistive superconducting tunnel junctions, excess subgap current is usually observed and is often attributed to microscopic pinholes in the tunnel barrier. We have studied the subgap current in superconductor-insulator-superconductor (SIS) and superconductor-insulator-normal-metal (SIN) junctions. In Al/AlO(x)/Al junctions, we observed a decrease of 2 orders of magnitude in the current upon the transition from the SIS to the SIN regime, where it then matched theory. In Al/AlO(x)/Cu junctions, we also observed generic features of coherent diffusive Andreev transport in a junction with a homogenous barrier. We use the quasiclassical Keldysh-Green function theory to quantify single- and two-particle tunneling and find good agreement with experiment over 2 orders of magnitude in transparency. We argue that our observations rule out pinholes as the origin of the excess current.


Physical Review B | 2014

Influence of topological edge states on the properties of Al/Bi2Se3/Al hybrid Josephson devices

Luca Galletti; Sophie Charpentier; M. Iavarone; P. Lucignano; D. Massarotti; Riccardo Arpaia; Yusuke Suzuki; Kazuo Kadowaki; Thilo Bauch; A. Tagliacozzo; F. Tafuri; Floriana Lombardi

In superconductor-topological insulator-superconductor hybrid junctions, the barrier edge states are expected to be protected against backscattering, to generate unconventional proximity effects, and, possibly, to signal the presence of Majorana fermions. The standards of proximity modes for these types of structures have to be settled for a neat identification of possible new entities. Through a systematic and complete set of measurements of the Josephson properties we find evidence of ballistic transport in coplanar Al-Bi2Se3-Al junctions that we attribute to a coherent transport through the topological edge state. The shunting effect of the bulk only influences the normal transport. This behavior, which can be considered to some extent universal, is fairly independent of the specific features of superconducting electrodes. A comparative study of Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations and scanning tunneling spectroscopy gave an experimental signature compatible with a two-dimensional electron transport channel with a Dirac dispersion relation. A reduction of the size of the Bi2Se3 flakes to the nanoscale is an unavoidable step to drive Josephson junctions in the proper regime to detect possible distinctive features of Majorana fermions.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2010

Submicron YBaCuO biepitaxial Josephson junctions: d-wave effects and phase dynamics

Daniela Stornaiuolo; G. Rotoli; Karin Cedergren; D. Born; Thilo Bauch; Floriana Lombardi; F. Tafuri

We report a systematic study of the transport properties of high critical temperature superconductor (HTS) biepitaxial Josephson junctions in the submicron range. Junction performances point to more uniform and reproducible devices and to better control of d-wave intrinsic properties. Outcomes promote novel insights into the transport mechanisms across grain boundaries and encourage further developments in the control of dissipation in HTS devices. The application of nanotechnology to HTS could be an additional tool to properly engineer the junction properties to match specific circuit design also in view of the integration into hybrid quantum circuits


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2014

Highly homogeneous YBCO/LSMO nanowires for photoresponse experiments

Riccardo Arpaia; M. Ejrnaes; L. Parlato; R. Cristiano; Marco Arzeo; Thilo Bauch; Shahid Nawaz; F. Tafuri; Giovanni Piero Pepe; Floriana Lombardi

By using nanolithography and a soft etching procedure, we have realized YBa2Cu3O7-x/La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 (YBCO/LSMO) nanowires, with cross sections down to 100 x 50 nm(2) that ensure the cover age of areas up to 10 x 30 mu m(2). The LSMO layer acts as a capping for YBCO, minimizing the degradation of the superconducting properties taking place during the patterning; moreover, as a ferromagnetic manganite, it is expected to accelerate the relaxation dynamics of quasiparticles in YBCO, making such a system potentially attractive for applications in superconducting ultrafast optoelectronics. The reproducibility of the values of the critical current densities measured in different devices with the same geometry makes our nanowires ideal candidates for photoresponse experiments. First measurements have shown a satisfactory photoresponse from YBCO/LSMO devices.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Ultra low noise YBa2Cu3O7−δ nano superconducting quantum interference devices implementing nanowires

Riccardo Arpaia; Marco Arzeo; Shahid Nawaz; Sophie Charpentier; Floriana Lombardi; Thilo Bauch

We present results on ultra low noise YBa

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Floriana Lombardi

Chalmers University of Technology

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Riccardo Arpaia

Chalmers University of Technology

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Francesco Tafuri

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Karin Cedergren

Chalmers University of Technology

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Sophie Charpentier

Chalmers University of Technology

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Per Delsing

Chalmers University of Technology

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Reza Baghdadi

Chalmers University of Technology

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Marco Arzeo

Chalmers University of Technology

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T. Claeson

Chalmers University of Technology

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