InAs nanowire superconducting tunnel junctions: spectroscopy, thermometry and nanorefrigeration
Abstract
We demonstrate an original method -- based on controlled oxidation -- to create high-quality tunnel junctions between superconducting Al reservoirs and InAs semiconductor nanowires. We show clean tunnel characteristics with a current suppression by over 4 orders of magnitude for a junction bias well below the Al gap 0 ≈ 200\,μ eV. The experimental data are in close agreement with the BCS theoretical expectations of a superconducting tunnel junction. The studied devices combine small-scale tunnel contacts working as thermometers as well as larger electrodes that provide a proof-of-principle active cooling of the electron distribution in the nanowire. A peak refrigeration of about δ T = 10\, mK is achieved at a bath temperature Tbath≈250-350\, mK in our prototype devices. This method opens important perspectives for the investigation of thermoelectric effects in semiconductor nanostructures and for nanoscale refrigeration.