High-temperature Josephson diode

  • Sanat Ghosh
  • , Vilas Patil
  • , Amit Basu
  • , Kuldeep
  • , Achintya Dutta
  • , Digambar A. Jangade
  • , Ruta Kulkarni
  • , A. Thamizhavel
  • , Jacob F. Steiner
  • , Felix von Oppen
  • , Mandar M. Deshmukh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Many superconducting systems with broken time-reversal and inversion symmetry show a superconducting diode effect, a non-reciprocal phenomenon analogous to semiconducting p–n-junction diodes. While the superconducting diode effect lays the foundation for realizing ultralow dissipative circuits, Josephson-phenomena-based diode effect (JDE) can enable the realization of protected qubits. The superconducting diode effect and JDE reported thus far are at low temperatures (~4 K), limiting their applications. Here we demonstrate JDE persisting up to 77 K using an artificial Josephson junction of twisted layers of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ. JDE manifests as an asymmetry in the magnitude and distributions of switching currents, attaining the maximum at 45° twist. The asymmetry is induced by and tunable with a very small magnetic field applied perpendicular to the junction and arises due to interaction between Josephson and Abrikosov vortices. We report a large asymmetry of 60% at 20 K. Our results provide a path towards realizing superconducting Josephson circuits at liquid-nitrogen temperature.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)612-618
Number of pages7
JournalNature Materials
Volume23
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2024
Externally publishedYes

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