Abstract
Quasiparticle excitations can compromise the performance of superconducting devices, causing high-frequency dissipation, decoherence in Josephson qubits1,2,3,4,5,6, and braiding errors in proposed Majorana-based topological quantum computers7,8,9. Quasiparticle dynamics have been studied in detail in metallic superconductors10,11,12,13,14 but remain relatively unexplored in semiconductor–superconductor structures, which are now being intensely pursued in the context of topological superconductivity. To this end, we use a system comprising a gate-confined semiconductor nanowire with an epitaxially grown superconductor layer, yielding an isolated, proximitized nanowire segment. We identify bound states in the semiconductor by means of bias spectroscopy, determine the characteristic temperatures and magnetic fields for quasiparticle excitations, and extract a parity lifetime (poisoning time) of the bound state in the semiconductor exceeding 10 ms.
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Main
Semiconductor–superconductor hybrids have been investigated for many years15,16,17,18,19, but have received renewed interest as platforms for emergent topological superconductors with Majorana end modes. Such modes are expected to show non-Abelian statistics, allowing, in principle, topological encoding of quantum information20,21,22 among other interesting effects23,24.
Transport experiments on semiconductor nanowires proximitized by a grounded superconductor have recently revealed characteristic signatures of Majorana modes25,26. Semiconductor quantum dots with superconducting leads have also been explored experimentally27,28,29,30, and have been proposed as a basis for Majorana chains31,32,33. Here, we expand these geometries by creating an isolated semiconductor–superconductor hybrid quantum dot (HQD) connected to normal leads. The device forms the basis of an isolated, mesoscopic Majorana system with protected total parity34,35.
The measured device consists of a hexagonal InAs nanowire with epitaxial superconducting Al on two facets36,37, and Au ohmic contacts (Fig. 1a, b), forming a normal metal–superconductor–normal metal (NSN) device. Four devices showing similar behaviour have been measured. Differential conductance, g, was measured in a dilution refrigerator (T ∼ 50 mK) using standard lock-in techniques. Local side gates and a global back gate were adjusted to form an Al–InAs HQD in the Coulomb blockade regime. The lower right gate, VR, was used to tune the occupation of the dot, with a linear compensation from the lower left gate, VL, to keep tunnelling to the leads symmetric. We parameterize this with a single effective gate voltage, VG (see Supplementary Information).
Differential conductance as a function of VG and source–drain bias, VSD, reveals a series of Coulomb diamonds, corresponding to incremental single-charge states of the HQD (Fig. 1c). Whereas conductance features at high bias are essentially identical in each diamond, at low bias, VSD < 0.2 mV, a repeating even–odd pattern of left- and right-facing conductance features is observed. This results in an even–odd alternation of Coulomb blockade peak spacings at zero bias, similar to metallic superconductors38,39. However, the parity-dependent reversing pattern of subgap features at non-zero bias has not been reported before, to our knowledge. The repeating even–odd pattern indicates that a parity-sensitive bound state is being repeatedly filled and emptied as electrons are added to the HQD.
The measured charging energy, EC = 1.1 meV, and superconducting gap, Δ = 180 μeV, satisfy the condition (Δ < EC) for single electron charging40,41. Differential conductance at low bias occurs in a series of narrow features symmetric about zero bias, suggesting transport through a bound state, with negative differential conductance (NDC) observed at the border of odd diamonds. NDC arises from slow quasiparticle escape, similar to current blocking seen in metallic superconducting islands in the opposite regime, Δ > EC (refs 42, 43).
We present a simple model of transport through a single bound state in the InAs plus a Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer (BCS) continuum in the Al. The model makes several simplifying assumptions: a fixed-energy bound state, motivated by the repetitive pattern observed in the Coulomb diamonds, and symmetric coupling of both the bound state and continuum to the leads, motivated by the observed symmetry in VSD of the Coulomb diamonds. Transition rates were calculated from Fermi’s golden rule and a steady-state Pauli master equation was solved for state occupancies. Conductance was then calculated from occupancies and transition rates (see Supplementary Information).
Measured and model conductances are compared in Fig. 2a, b. The coupling of the bound state to each lead, noting the near-symmetry of the diamonds, was estimated to be Γ0 = 0.5 GHz, based on zero-bias conductance (Fig. 2d). The energy of the state, E0 = 58 μeV at zero magnetic field, was measured using finite bias spectroscopy (Fig. 2e). The normal-state conductance from each lead to the continuum, gAl = 0.15 e2/h, was estimated by comparing Coulomb blockaded transport features in the high-bias regime (VSD = 0.4 mV). The superconducting gap, Δ = 180 μeV, was found from the onset of NDC at eVSD = Δ − E0 (Fig. 2f). Although the rate model shows good agreement with experimental data, some features are not captured, including broadening at high bias, with greater broadening correlated with weaker NDC, and peak-to-peak fluctuations in the slope of the NDC feature. These features may be related to heating or co-tunnelling, not accounted for by the model.
The observation of negative differential conductance places a bound on the relaxation rate of a single quasiparticle in the HQD from the continuum (in the Al) to the bound state (in the InAs nanowire). NDC arises when an electron tunnels into the weakly coupled BCS continuum, blockading transport until it exits via the lead. The blocking condition is shown for a hole-like excitation in Fig. 2f. Unblocking occurs when the quasiparticle relaxes into the bound state, followed by a fast escape to the leads. NDC thus indicates a long quasiparticle relaxation time, τqp, from the continuum to the bound state. Using independently determined parameters, the observed NDC is compatible with the model only when τqp > 0.1 μs (see Supplementary Information), which is used below to constrain the poisoning time for the bound state.
Turning our attention to the even–odd structure at zero bias, we observed consistent large–small peak spacings (Fig. 3a, b), associating larger spacings with even occupation, as expected theoretically40,41. Parity reversals were observed on the timescale of hours, similar to observations in metallic devices14. Peak spacing alternation disappears at higher magnetic fields, B, consistent with the superconducting-to-normal transition, and also disappears at elevated temperature, T > 0.4 K, significantly below the superconducting critical temperature, Tc ∼ 1 K. The temperature dependence is similar to metallic structures38,39, and can be understood as the result of thermal activation of quasiparticles within the HQD with fixed total charge.
As seen in Fig. 3c, individual Coulomb peaks are asymmetric in shape, with their centroids (first moments) on the even sides of the peak maxima. The asymmetric shape is most pronounced at low temperature, T < 0.15 K, and decreases with increasing magnetic field. The degree of asymmetry is not predicted by the rate model, even taking into account the known small asymmetry due to spin degeneracy44. In the analysis below, we consider peak positions defined both by peak maxima and centroids.
A model of even–odd Coulomb peak spacing that includes thermal quasiparticle excitations follows earlier treatments38,39,41, including a discrete subgap state as well as the BCS continuum39 (Fig. 3d). The even–odd peak spacing difference, Se − So, depends on the difference of free energies,
where α is the (dimensionless) gate lever arm. The free energy difference, written in terms of the ratio of the partition functions Z,
depends on D(E), the density of states of the HQD,
where D(E) consists of one subgap state and the continuum. For Δ ≫ kBT, this can be written
where is the effective number of continuum states for Al with volume VAl and electron density of states ρAl (refs 38, 39).
Within the thermodynamic model, one can identify a characteristic temperature, T∗ ∼ Δ/[kB ln(Neff)], less than the gap and independent of E0, above which even–odd peak spacing alternation is expected to disappear. A second (lower) characteristic temperature, T∗∗ ∼ (Δ − E0)/[kB ln(Neff/2)], is where the even–odd alternation is affected by the bound state, leading to saturation at low temperature38,39. For a zero-energy (E0 = 0) bound state—the case for Majorana modes—these characteristic temperatures coincide and even–odd structure vanishes, as pointed out in ref. 34. For E0 = Δ the saturation temperature vanishes, T∗∗ = 0, and the metallic result is recovered38,39.
Experimentally, the average even–odd peak spacing difference, 〈Se − So〉, was determined by averaging over a set of 24 consecutive Coulomb peak spacings, including those shown in Fig. 3. Figure 4 shows the even–odd peak spacing difference appearing abruptly at Tonset ∼ 0.4 K, and saturating at Tsat ∼ 0.2 K, with a saturation amplitude near the value expected from the measured bound-state energy, 4V0 = 4E0/(αe). Figure 4 shows good agreement between experiment and the model, equation (1), using a density of states determined independently from data in Fig. 2, with V = 7.4 × 104 nm3 as a fit parameter, consistent with the micrograph (Fig. 1a), and ρAl = 23 eV −1 nm−3 (ref. 14).
The asymmetric peak shape amounts to larger peak tails on the even valley side, causing the centroids to be more regularly spaced than the maxima. This is evident in Fig. 4, where the centroid method shows a decreasing peak spacing difference at low temperature, whereas with the maximum method the spacing remains flat. The thermal model of Se–So can also show a decrease at low temperature if broadening of the bound state is included. We do not understand at present if this effect explains the difference between centroids and maxima, however, it is worth noting that the fit gives a broadening γ = 50 neV, reasonably close to the value estimated from the lead couplings, (hΓ0)2/Δ = 20 neV .
An applied magnetic field (direction shown in Fig. 1b) reduces the characteristic temperatures Tonset, Tsat, and saturation amplitudes. Field dependence is modelled by including Zeeman splitting of the bound state and orbital reduction of the gap. The fit g-factor, g = 6, lies within the typical range for InAs nanowires45,46, supporting our interpretation that the bound state resides in the InAs.
Agreement with the thermodynamic model suggests that ensemble averages of even–odd spacing, Se − So, provide a measure of the equilibrium quasiparticle density, nqp. Figure 4 (right axis) gives the value , an expression valid for large charging energy47 (see Supplementary Methods and Supplementary Section 5). Below Tsat ∼ 0.2 K, even–odd spacing saturates at the bound-state value 4V0, making it difficult to infer a quasiparticle density in this low-temperature range. Instead, we conservatively take nqp(Tsat) ∼ 0.1 μm−3 as an upper bound for the quasiparticle density at low temperature. This value is within the range from the recent literature, 0.03–30 μm−3 (refs 3, 4, 5, 6, 13). Because the volume of Al is small, the upper bound on the number of quasiparticles, nqpVAl < 10−5, is, correspondingly, small.
Finally, we determine a lower bound on the poisoning time, τp, of the bound state. The physical mechanism for this poisoning is relaxation of a quasiparticle into the InAs from the Al, which preserves the overall parity of the HQD but changes the parity of the bound state. This process is expected to set the fundamental limit on parity lifetime8. The poisoning rate, 1/τp, is given by the product of the relaxation rate of a single quasiparticle from the Al, 1/τqp, and the number of quasiparticles in the Al (ref. 8), which, from above, is bounded by nqpVAl < 10−5. Quantitative analysis of the strength of negative differential conductance at finite bias—which vanishes for fast quasiparticle relaxation—provides a lower bound on the quasiparticle relaxation time, τqp > 0.1 μs (Supplementary Section 2). Together, these values give a conservative lower bound on the poisoning time of the bound state, τp = τqp/(nqpVAl) > 10 ms.
Quasiparticle density depends sensitively on device geometry, filtering and shielding, resulting in a wide range of experimental values (0.03–30 μm−3; refs 3, 4, 5, 6), and thus poisoning times. We note that recent work in transmon qubits13 found nqp = 0.04 μm−3, corresponding to state-poisoning times well above 10 ms. We also note that the Coulomb blockade geometry effectively enforces quasiparticles from the Al shell to be created only in pairs, which is different from non-charging device geometries.
On the basis of previous work, τqp, hence τp, is expected to depend weakly on the bound-state energy for low-energy bound states11,48,49, including zero-energy Majorana modes with E0 = 0. The long poisoning time found here, τp > 10 ms, is auspicious for application of this system to topological quantum computing, suggesting that a large number of braiding operations of Majorana modes could be performed before the parity of the bound state is poisoned by the proximitizing Al. Future work will examine Majorana modes in this geometry.
Methods
Sample preparation.
InAs nanowires were grown without stacking faults in the [001] direction with a wurtzite crystal structure with Al epitaxially matched to [111] on two of the six side facets36,37. They were then deposited randomly onto a doped silicon substrate with 100 nm of thermal oxide. Electron-beam lithographically patterned wet etch of the epitaxial Al shell (Transene Al Etchant D, 55 C, 10 s) resulted in a submicron Al segment (310 nm, Fig. 1a). Ti/Au (5/100 nm) ohmic contacts were deposited on the ends following in situ Ar milling (1 mtorr, 300 V, 75 s), with side gates deposited in the same step. For the device presented here, the end of the upper left gate broke off during processing. However, the device could be tuned well without it.
Master equations.
The master equations (used for Fig. 1b) consider states with fixed total parity, composed of the combined parity of quasiparticles in the thermalized continuum and the 0, 1, or 2 quasiparticles in the bound state (see Supplementary Information).
Free energy model.
Even and odd partition functions in equation (2), Fo − Fe = −kBTln(Zo/Ze), can be written as sums of Boltzmann factors over respectively odd and even occupancies of the isolated island. For even occupancy,
where the first term stands for zero quasiparticles, the second for two (at energies Ei and Ej), and additional terms for four, six, and so on. Zo similarly runs over odd occupied states. Rewriting these sums as integrals over positive energies yields
where D(E) is the density of states of the HQD,
We take ρBCS(E) to be a standard BCS density of states,
(θ is the step function), and ρ0 to be a pair of Lorentzian-broadened spinful levels symmetric about zero,
Zeeman splitting of the bound state and pair-breaking by the external magnetic field are modelled with the equations
where E0 is the zero-field state energy and Δ is the zero-field superconducting gap. In the event that a bound state goes above the continuum, Es+ > Δ(B), we no longer include the state in the free energy. Equation (3) was integrated numerically to obtain the theoretical curves in Fig. 4.
Equations (4) and (5) are reasonable, provided the lower spin-split state remains at positive energy, E0− > 0. For sufficiently large Bc, the bound state will reach zero energy, resulting in topological superconductivity and Majorana modes, the subject of future work.
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Acknowledgements
We thank L. Glazman, B. Halperin, R. Lutchyn and J. Pekola for valuable discussions, and G. Ungaretti, S. Upadhyay and C. Sørensen for contributions to growth and fabrication. Research support by Microsoft Project Q, the Danish National Research Foundation, the Lundbeck Foundation, the Carlsberg Foundation, and the European Commission. A.P.H. acknowledges support from the US Department of Energy, C.M.M. acknowledges support from the Villum Foundation.
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P.K., T.S.J. and J.N. developed the nanowire materials. S.M.A. fabricated the devices, A.P.H., S.M.A. and W.C. carried out the measurements with input from F.K., T.S.J. and C.M.M. The theoretical model was developed by G.K., K.F. and A.P.H. All authors contributed to analysing and interpreting the data and to writing the manuscript.
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Higginbotham, A., Albrecht, S., Kiršanskas, G. et al. Parity lifetime of bound states in a proximitized semiconductor nanowire. Nature Phys 11, 1017–1021 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3461
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3461
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