Abstract

Quantum thermodynamics is a promising route to unambiguous detections of Majorana bound states. Being fundamentally different from quantum transport, this approach reveals unique Majorana thermodynamic behavior and deepens our insight into Majorana quantum transport itself. Here, we demonstrate that a nanoscopic system with topological superconductors produces a remarkable accumulation of Majorana thermodynamic states in wide ranges of Majorana tunneling phases by means of increasing its temperature $T$. Revealing this physical behavior is twofold beneficial. First, it significantly reduces the dependence of the entropy on the tunneling phases which become almost irrelevant in experiments. Second, the fractional Majorana entropy ${S}_{M}^{(2)}={k}_{B}ln({2}^{\frac{3}{2}})$ may be observed at high temperatures, substantially facilitating experiments. Analyzing quantum transport, we predict that when the temperature increases, the above thermodynamic behavior will induce an anomalous increase of the linear conductance from vanishing values up to the unitary fractional Majorana plateau ${G}_{M}={e}^{2}/2h$ extending to high temperatures.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call