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Dive into the research topics where Tudor D. Stanescu is active.

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Featured researches published by Tudor D. Stanescu.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2013

Majorana fermions in semiconductor nanowires: fundamentals, modeling, and experiment

Tudor D. Stanescu; Sumanta Tewari

After a recent series of rapid and exciting developments, the long search for the Majorana fermion-the elusive quantum entity at the border between particles and antiparticles-has produced the first positive experimental results, but is not over yet. Originally proposed by Exa0Majorana in the context of particle physics, Majorana fermions have a condensed matter analogue in the zero-energy bound states emerging in topological superconductors. A promising route to engineering topological superconductors capable of hosting Majorana zero modes consists of proximity coupling semiconductor thin films or nanowires with strong spin-orbit interaction to conventional s-wave superconductors in the presence of an external Zeeman field. The Majorana zero mode is predicted to emerge above a certain critical Zeeman field as a zero-energy state localized near the order parameter defects, namely, vortices for thin films and wire ends for the nanowire. These Majorana bound states are expected to manifest non-Abelian quantum statistics, which makes them ideal building blocks for fault-tolerant topological quantum computation. This review provides an update on the current status of the search for Majorana fermions in semiconductor nanowires by focusing on the recent developments, in particular the period following the first reports of experimental signatures consistent with the realization of Majorana bound states in semiconductor nanowire-superconductor hybrid structures. We start with a discussion of the fundamental aspects of the subject, followed by considerations on the realistic modeling, which is a critical bridge between theoretical predictions based on idealized conditions and the real world, as probed experimentally. The last part is dedicated to a few intriguing issues that were brought to the fore by the recent encouraging experimental advances.


Physical Review B | 2011

Majorana Fermions in Semiconductor Nanowires

Tudor D. Stanescu; Roman M. Lutchyn; S. Das Sarma

We study multiband semiconducting nanowires proximity coupled with an


Science Advances | 2017

Experimental phase diagram of zero-bias conductance peaks in superconductor/semiconductor nanowire devices

Jun Chen; Peng Yu; John Stenger; Moïra Hocevar; Diana Car; Sr Sebastien Plissard; Epam Erik Bakkers; Tudor D. Stanescu; Sergey Frolov

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Physical Review Letters | 2012

To close or not to close: the fate of the superconducting gap across the topological quantum phase transition in Majorana-carrying semiconductor nanowires.

Tudor D. Stanescu; Sumanta Tewari; J. D. Sau; Sankar Das Sarma

-wave superconductor and calculate the topological phase diagram as a function of the chemical potential and magnetic field. The nontrivial topological state corresponds to a superconducting phase supporting an odd number of pairs of Majorana modes localized at the ends of the wire, whereas the nontopological state corresponds to a superconducting phase with no Majoranas or with an even number of pairs of Majorana modes. Our key finding is that multiband occupancy not only lifts the stringent constraint of one-dimensionality, but also allows having higher carrier density in the nanowire. Consequently, multiband nanowires are better suited for stabilizing the topological superconducting phase and for observing the Majorana physics. We present a detailed study of the parameter space for multiband semiconductor nanowires focusing on understanding the key experimental conditions required for the realization and detection of Majorana fermions in solid-state systems. We include various sources of disorder and characterize their effects on the stability of the topological phase. Finally, we calculate the local density of states as well as the differential tunneling conductance as functions of external parameters and predict the experimental signatures that would establish the existence of emergent Majorana zero-energy modes in solid-state systems.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Topologically non-trivial superconductivity in spin-orbit-coupled systems: bulk phases and quantum phase transitions

Sumanta Tewari; Tudor D. Stanescu; Jay D. Sau; S. Das Sarma

Map to Majorana fermions in nanowires is revealed. Topological superconductivity is an exotic state of matter characterized by spinless p-wave Cooper pairing of electrons and by Majorana zero modes at the edges. The first signature of topological superconductivity is a robust zero-bias peak in tunneling conductance. We perform tunneling experiments on semiconductor nanowires (InSb) coupled to superconductors (NbTiN) and establish the zero-bias peak phase in the space of gate voltage and external magnetic field. Our findings are consistent with calculations for a finite-length topological nanowire and provide means for Majorana manipulation as required for braiding and topological quantum bits.Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA Department of Physics and Astronomy, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506, USA Institut Néel CNRS, 38042 Grenoble, France Eindhoven University of Technology, 5600 MB, Eindhoven, The Netherlands LAAS CNRS, Université de Toulouse, 31031 Toulouse, France QuTech and Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, Delft University of Technology, 2628 CJ Delft, The Netherlands


Physical Review B | 2012

Topological minigap in quasi-one-dimensional spin-orbit-coupled semiconductor Majorana wires

Sumanta Tewari; Jay D. Sau; S. Das Sarma; Tudor D. Stanescu

We investigate theoretically the low-energy physics of semiconductor Majorana wires in the vicinity of a magnetic field-driven topological quantum phase transition (TQPT). The local density of states at the end of the wire, which is directly related to the differential conductance in the limit of point-contact tunneling, is calculated numerically. We find that the dependence of the end-of-wire local density of states on the magnetic field is nonuniversal and that the signatures associated with the closing of the superconducting gap at the Majorana TQPT are essentially invisible within a significant range of experimentally relevant parameters. Our results provide a possible explanation for the recent observation of the apparent nonclosure of the gap at the Majorana TQPT in semiconductor nanowires.


Physical Review B | 2014

Soft superconducting gap in semiconductor-based Majorana nanowires

Tudor D. Stanescu; Roman M. Lutchyn; S. Das Sarma

Topologically non-trivial superconductivity has been predicted to occur in superconductors with a sizable spin–orbit (SO) coupling in the presence of an external Zeeman splitting. Two such systems have been proposed: (a) s-wave superconductor pair potential is proximity induced on a semiconductor and (b) pair potential naturally arises from an intrinsic s-wave pairing interaction. As it is now well known, such systems in the form of a two-dimensional (2D) film or 1D nano-wires in a wire network can be used in topological quantum computation. When the external Zeeman splitting Γ crosses a critical value Γc, the system passes from a regular superconducting phase to a non-Abelian topological superconducting phase. In both cases (a) and (b) that we consider in this paper, the pair potential Δ is strictly s-wave in both the ordinary and the topological superconducting phases, which are separated by a topological quantum critical point at , where μu2009(Δ) is the chemical potential. On the other hand, since ΓcΔ, the Zeeman splitting required for the topological phase (Γ>Γc) far exceeds the value (Γ~Δ) above which an s-wave pair potential is expected to vanish (and the system to become non-superconducting) in the absence of SO coupling. We are thus led to the situation that the topological superconducting phase appears to set in a parameter regime at which the system is actually non-superconducting in the absence of SO coupling. In this paper, we address the question of how a pure s-wave pair potential can survive a strong Zeeman field to give rise to a topological superconducting phase. We show that the SO coupling is the crucial parameter for the quantum transition into and the robustness of the topologically non-trivial superconducting phase realized for ΓΔ.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2014

Coulomb interaction effects on the Majorana states in quantum wires

Andrei Manolescu; D. C. Marinescu; Tudor D. Stanescu

The excitation gap above the Majorana fermion (MF) modes at the ends of 1D topological superconducting (TS) semiconductor wires scales with the bulk quasiparticle gap E_{qp}. This gap, also called minigap, facilitates experimental detection of the pristine TS state and MFs at experimentally accessible temperatures T << E_{qp}. Here we show that the linear scaling of minigap with E_{qp} can fail in quasi-1D wires with multiple confinement bands when the applied Zeeman field is greater than or equal to about half of the confinement-induced bandgap. TS states in such wires have an approximate chiral symmetry supporting multiple near zero energy modes at each end leading to a minigap which can effectively vanish. We show that the problem of small minigap in such wires can be resolved by forcing the system to break the approximate chirality symmetry externally with a second Zeeman field. Although experimental signatures such as zero bias peak from the wire ends is suppressed by the second Zeeman field above a critical value, such a field is required in some important parameter regimes of quasi-1D wires to isolate the topological physics of end state MFs. We also discuss the crucial difference of our minigap calculations from the previously reported minigap results appropriate for idealized spinless p-wave superconductors and explain why the clustering of fermionic subgap states around the zero energy Majorana end state with increasing chemical potential seen in the latter system does not apply to the experimental TS states in spin-orbit coupled nanowires.


Physical Review B | 2012

Momentum relaxation in a semiconductor proximity-coupled to a disordered s -wave superconductor: Effect of scattering on topological superconductivity

Roman M. Lutchyn; Tudor D. Stanescu; S. Das Sarma

We develop a theory for the proximity effect in superconductor--semiconductor--normal-metal tunneling structures, which have recently been extensively studied experimentally, leading to the observation of transport signatures consistent with the predicted zero-energy Majorana bound states. We show that our model for the semiconductor nanowire having multiple occupied subbands with different transmission probabilities through the barrier reproduces the observed ``soft-gap behavior associated with substantial subgap tunneling conductance. We study the manifestations of the soft-gap phenomenon both in the tunneling conductance and in local density of states measurements and discuss the correlations between these two quantities. We emphasize that the proximity effect associated with the hybridization between low-lying states in the multiband semiconductor and the normal-metal states in the lead is an intrinsic effect leading to the soft-gap problem. In addition to the intrinsic contribution, there may be extrinsic effects, such as, for example, interface disorder, exacerbating the soft-gap problem. Our work establishes the generic possibility of an ubiquitous presence of an intrinsic soft gap in the superconductor--semiconductor--normal-metal tunneling transport conductance induced by the inverse proximity effect of the normal metal.


Physical Review B | 2013

Disentangling Majorana fermions from topologically trivial low-energy states in semiconductor Majorana wires

Tudor D. Stanescu; Sumanta Tewari

The stability of the Majorana modes in the presence of a repulsive interaction is studied in the standard semiconductor wire-metallic superconductor configuration. The effects of short-range Coulomb interaction, which is incorporated using a purely repulsive δ-function to model the strong screening effect due to the presence of the superconductor, are determined within a Hartree-Fock approximation of the effective Bogoliubov-De Gennes Hamiltonian that describes the low-energy physics of the wire. Through a numerical diagonalization procedure we obtain interaction corrections to the single particle eigenstates and calculate the extended topological phase diagram in terms of the chemical potential and the Zeeman energy. We find that, for a fixed Zeeman energy, the interaction shifts the phase boundaries to a higher chemical potential, whereas for a fixed chemical potential this shift can occur either at lower or higher Zeeman energies. These effects can be interpreted as a renormalization of the g-factor due to the interaction. The minimum Zeeman energy needed to realize Majorana fermions decreases with the increasing strength of the Coulomb repulsion. Furthermore, we find that in wires with multi-band occupancy this effect can be enhanced by increasing the chemical potential, i.e. by occupying higher energy bands.

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A. A. Aczel

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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David Lederman

West Virginia University

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Dimitrie Culcer

Northern Illinois University

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Felio A. Perez

West Virginia University

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John Stenger

West Virginia University

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Jun Chen

University of Pittsburgh

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M. R. Fitzsimmons

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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