npj Quantum Materials (Mar 2017)

Zero-energy pinning from interactions in Majorana nanowires

  • Fernando Domínguez,
  • Jorge Cayao,
  • Pablo San-Jose,
  • Ramón Aguado,
  • Alfredo Levy Yeyati,
  • Elsa Prada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41535-017-0012-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Condensed-matter physics: zero-energy pinning of Majoranas Majorana zero modes are quasiparticle excitations which are charge neutral at the boundaries of topological superconductors. Their practical generation in semiconducting nanowires of realistic length often faces Majorana overlaps leading to charged states that are no longer topologically protected against electrostatic interactions with the environment. Now, a team of researchers in Spain from Autonomous University of Madrid and Institute of Materials Science of Madrid, CSIC, demonstrates that the electrostatic environment may be engineered so that interactions fully suppress Majorana hybridization around parity crossings. That is, zero-energy crossings are stabilized into regions in parameter space where Majoranas become pinned to zero energy. The zero splitting of non-overlapping Majoranas, commonly associated to topological protection and to applications in topological quantum computation, can occur in spite of the Majorana overlap in nanowires of finite length. The generic zero-energy pinning mechanism could be extended to other contexts such as parity crossings of Shiba states in non-topological superconductors.