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Superconductivity of nanometer-size Pb islands studied by low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy
48
Citations
4
References
2006
Year
Superconducting MaterialIsland SizeEngineeringBismuth-based SuperconductorsTunneling MicroscopyNovel SuperconductorsSuperconductivityQuantum MaterialsNanoscale ScienceSuperconducting DevicesLow-temperature SuperconductivityMaterials ScienceHigh-tc SuperconductivityPhysicsNanotechnologyTunneling SpectraHigh-temperature SuperconductivityCondensed Matter PhysicsApplied PhysicsPb Island StructuresNanometer-size Pb IslandsQuantum Superconductivity
Using a low-temperature (1.2K) scanning tunneling microscopy, the tunneling spectra showing the superconducting gap was taken on Pb island structures, whose dimension ranges from 80 to 300nm in diameter and 7–12 monolayers in thickness. There is no considerable spatial variation in the tunneling spectra taken on a single island regardless of local geometry (center or peripheral) and thickness of the measured sites. The superconducting gap increases with the island size, and the size dependence is enhanced at higher temperature (3.9K). The behavior of the gap is explained qualitatively by considering the superconducting fluctuation in the small islands.
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