Proximity effects at the interface of a superconductor and a topological insulator in NbN - Bi2Se3 thin film bilayers
Abstract
In a search for a simple proximity system of a topological insulator and a superconductor for studying the role of surface versus bulk effects by gating, we report here on a first step toward this goal, namely the choice of such a system and its characterization. We chose to work with thin film bilayers of grainy 5 nm thick NbN films as the superconductor, overlayed with 20 nm thick topological layer of Bi2Se3 and compare the transport results to those obtained on a 5 nm thick reference NbN film on the same wafer. Bilayers with ex-situ and in-situ prepared NbN-Bi2Se3 interfaces were studied and two kinds of proximity effects were found. At high temperatures just below the superconducting transition, all bilayers showed a conventional proximity effect where the topological Bi2Se3 suppresses the onset or mid-transition Tc of the superconducting NbN films by about 1 K. At low temperatures, a cross-over of the resistance versus temperature curves of the bilayer and reference NbN film occurs, where the bilayers show enhancement of Tc(R=0), Ic (the supercurrent) and the Andreev conductance, as compared to the bare NbN films. This indicates that superconductivity is induced in the Bi2Se3 layer at the interface region in between the NbN grains. Thus an inverse proximity effect in the topological material is demonstrated.
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