Nature Communications (Oct 2023)

Subgap spectroscopy along hybrid nanowires by nm-thick tunnel barriers

  • Vukan Levajac,
  • Ji-Yin Wang,
  • Cristina Sfiligoj,
  • Mathilde Lemang,
  • Jan Cornelis Wolff,
  • Alberto Bordin,
  • Ghada Badawy,
  • Sasa Gazibegovic,
  • Erik P. A. M. Bakkers,
  • Leo P. Kouwenhoven

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42422-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Tunneling spectroscopy is widely used to examine the subgap spectra in semiconductor-superconductor nanostructures when searching for Majorana zero modes (MZMs). Typically, semiconductor sections controlled by local gates at the ends of hybrids serve as tunnel barriers. Besides detecting states only at the hybrid ends, such gate-defined tunnel probes can cause the formation of non-topological subgap states that mimic MZMs. Here, we develop an alternative type of tunnel probes to overcome these limitations. After the growth of an InSb-Al hybrid nanowire, a precisely controlled in-situ oxidation of the Al shell is performed to yield a nm-thick AlOx layer. In such thin isolating layer, tunnel probes can be arbitrarily defined at any position along the hybrid nanowire by shadow-wall angle-deposition of metallic leads. In this work, we make multiple tunnel probes along single nanowire hybrids and successfully identify Andreev bound states (ABSs) of various spatial extension residing along the hybrids.