Andreev reflection

Andreev reflection

[

An electron (red) meeting the interface between a normal conductor (N) and a superconductor (S) produces a Cooper pair in the superconductor and a retroreflected hole (green) in the normal conductor. Vertical arrows indicate the spin band occupied by each particle.]

Andreev reflection (AR) named after the Russian physicist Alexander F. Andreev, is a type of particle scattering whichoccurs at interfaces between a superconductor (S) and a normal state material (N). It is a charge transfer process by which normal current is transferred to supercurrent in S, avoiding the forbidden single particle transmission by a dual transfer process across the interface.

Overview

The process involves an electron(hole) incident on the interface at energies less than the superconducting gap from the normal state material forming a Cooper pair in the superconductor with the retroreflection of a hole(electron) of opposite spin and momentum to the incidient electron (see Figure). The barrier transparency is assumed to be high, with no oxide or tunnel layer which reduces instances of normal e-e or h-h scattering at the interface. Since the pair consists of an up and down spin electron, a second electron(hole) of opposite spin to the incident electron(hole) from the normal state forms the pair in the superconductor, and hence the retroreflected hole(electron).

It should be noted that through time reversal symmetry, the figured process with incident electron will work with an incident hole (and retroreflected electron).

The process is highly spin dependent - if only one spin band is occupied by the conduction electrons in the normal state material (ie - it is fully spin polarised), Andreev reflection will be inhibited due to inability to form a pair in the superconductor and impossibility of single particle transmission. In a ferromagnet or material where spin polarization exists or may be induced by a magnetic field the strength of the Andreev reflection (and hence conductance of the junction) is a function of the spin polarisation in the normal state.

The spin dependence of AR gives rise to the Point Contact Andreev Reflection (or PCAR) technique, whereby a narrow superconducting tip (often Nb, Sb or Pb) is placed into contact with a normal material at temperatures below the critical temperature of the tip. By applying a voltage to the tip, and measuring differential conductance between it and the sample, the spin polarisation of the normal metal at that point (and magnetic field) may be determined. This is of use in such tasks as measument of spin polarised currents or characterising spin polarisation of material layers or bulk samples, and the effects of magnetic fields on such properties.

In an AR process, the phase difference between the electron and hole is -π/2 plus the phase of the superconducting order parameter.

Crossed Andreev Reflection

Crossed Andreev reflection, or CAR, also known as non-local Andreev reflection occurs when two spatially separated normal state material electrodes form two separate junctions with a superconductor, with the junction separation of the order of the BCS superconducting coherence length of the material in question. In such a device, retroreflection of the hole from an Andreev reflection process, resulting from an incident electron at energies less than the superconducting gap at one lead, occurs in the second spatially separated normal lead with the same charge transfer as in a normal AR process to a Cooper pair in the superconductor. For CAR to occur, electrons of opposite spin must exist at each normal electrode (so as to form the pair in the superconductor). If the normal material is a ferromagnet this may be guaranteed by creating opposite spin polarisation via the application of a magnetic field to normal electrodes of differing coercivity.

CAR occurs in competition with elastic cotunelling or EC, the quantum mechanical tunneling of electrons between the normal leads via an intermediate state in the superconductor. This process conserves electron spin. As such, a detectable CAR potential at one electrode on the application of current to the other may be masked by the competing EC process, making clear detection difficult. In addition, normal Andreev reflection may occur at either interface, in conjunction with other normal electron scattering processes from the normal/superconductor interface.

The process is of interest in the formation of solid state quantum entanglement, via the formation of a spatially separated entangled electron-hole (Andreev) pair, with applications in spintronics and quantum computing.

References

Further reading

;Books
* P.G. de Gennes "Superconductivity of Metals and Alloys" W. A. Benjamin (New York, Amsterdam, 1966)
* M. Tinkham, "Introduction to Superconductivity", McGraw-Hill (New York 1996)

;Papers
* A.F. Andreev, "Sov. Phys. JETP" 19, 1228 (1964)
* cite journal
author=C.W.J. Beenakker
year=2000
title=Why does a metal-superconductor junction have a resistance?
url= http://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/9909293


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