Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

Intrinsic supercurrent non-reciprocity coupled to the crystal structure of a van der Waals Josephson barrier

  • Jae-Keun Kim,
  • Kun-Rok Jeon,
  • Pranava K. Sivakumar,
  • Jaechun Jeon,
  • Chris Koerner,
  • Georg Woltersdorf,
  • Stuart S. P. Parkin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45298-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Non-reciprocal electronic transport in a spatially homogeneous system arises from the simultaneous breaking of inversion and time-reversal symmetries. Superconducting and Josephson diodes, a key ingredient for future non-dissipative quantum devices, have recently been realized. Only a few examples of a vertical superconducting diode effect have been reported and its mechanism, especially whether intrinsic or extrinsic, remains elusive. Here we demonstrate a substantial supercurrent non-reciprocity in a van der Waals vertical Josephson junction formed with a T d-WTe2 barrier and NbSe2 electrodes that clearly reflects the intrinsic crystal structure of T d-WTe2. The Josephson diode efficiency increases with the T d-WTe2 thickness up to critical thickness, and all junctions, irrespective of the barrier thickness, reveal magneto-chiral characteristics with respect to a mirror plane of T d-WTe2. Our results, together with the twist-angle-tuned magneto-chirality of a T d-WTe2 double-barrier junction, show that two-dimensional materials promise vertical Josephson diodes with high efficiency and tunability.