Physical Review X (May 2013)

Josephson Supercurrent through the Topological Surface States of Strained Bulk HgTe

  • Jeroen B. Oostinga,
  • Luis Maier,
  • Peter Schüffelgen,
  • Daniel Knott,
  • Christopher Ames,
  • Christoph Brüne,
  • Grigory Tkachov,
  • Hartmut Buhmann,
  • Laurens W. Molenkamp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.3.021007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
p. 021007

Abstract

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Strained bulk HgTe is a three-dimensional topological insulator, whose surface electrons have a high mobility (∼30 000 cm^{2}/Vs), while its bulk is effectively free of mobile charge carriers. These properties enable a study of transport through its unconventional surface states without being hindered by a parallel bulk conductance. Here, we show transport experiments on HgTe-based Josephson junctions to investigate the appearance of the predicted Majorana states at the interface between a topological insulator and a superconductor. Interestingly, we observe a dissipationless supercurrent flow through the topological surface states of HgTe. The current-voltage characteristics are hysteretic at temperatures below 1 K, with critical supercurrents of several microamperes. Moreover, we observe a magnetic-field-induced Fraunhofer pattern of the critical supercurrent, indicating a dominant 2π-periodic Josephson effect in the unconventional surface states. Our results show that strained bulk HgTe is a promising material system to get a better understanding of the Josephson effect in topological surface states, and to search for the manifestation of zero-energy Majorana states in transport experiments.