Nature Communications (Jul 2025)

The feedback driven atomic scale Josephson microscope

  • Samuel D. Escribano,
  • Víctor Barrena,
  • David Perconte,
  • Jose Antonio Moreno,
  • Marta Fernández Lomana,
  • Miguel Águeda,
  • Edwin Herrera,
  • Beilun Wu,
  • Jose Gabriel Rodrigo,
  • Elsa Prada,
  • Isabel Guillamón,
  • Alfredo Levy Yeyati,
  • Hermann Suderow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-60569-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract The ultimate spatial limit to establish a Josephson coupling between two superconducting electrodes is an atomic-scale junction. The Josephson effect in such ultrasmall junctions has been used to unveil new switching dynamics, study coupling close to superconducting bound states or reveal non-reciprocal effects. However, the Josephson coupling is weak and the sensitivity to temperature reduces the Cooper pair current magnitude. Here we show that a feedback element induces a time-dependent bistable regime which consists of spontaneous periodic oscillations between two different Cooper pair tunneling states (corresponding to the DC and AC Josephson regimes respectively). The amplitude of the time-averaged current within the bistable regime is almost independent of temperature. By tracing the periodic oscillations in the new bistable regime as a function of the position in a Scanning Tunneling Microscope, we obtain atomic scale maps of the critical current in 2H-NbSe2 and find spatial modulations due to a pair density wave. Our results fundamentally improve our understanding of atomic size Josephson junctions including a feedback element in the circuit and provide a promising new route to study superconducting materials through atomic scale maps of the Josephson coupling.