Abstract
Hybrid devices combining quantum dots with superconductors are important building blocks of conventional and topological quantum-information experiments. A requirement for the success of such experiments is to understand the various tunneling-induced non-local interaction mechanisms that are present in the devices, namely crossed Andreev reflection, elastic co-tunneling, and direct interdot tunneling. Here, we provide a theoretical study of a simple device that consists of two quantum dots and a superconductor tunnel-coupled to the dots, often called a Cooper-pair splitter. We study the three special cases where one of the three non-local mechanisms dominates, and calculate measurable ground-state properties, as well as the zero-bias and finite-bias differential conductance characterizing electron transport through this device. We describe how each non-local mechanism controls the measurable quantities, and thereby find experimental fingerprints that allow one to identify and quantify the dominant non-local mechanism using experimental data. Finally, we study the triplet blockade effect and the associated negative differential conductance in the Cooper-pair splitter, and show that they can arise regardless of the nature of the dominant non-local coupling mechanism. Our results should facilitate the characterization of hybrid devices, and their optimization for various quantum-information-related experiments and applications.
Highlights
Superconducting hybrid nanodevices provide a promising platform for quantum architectures
We demonstrate and analyze the appearance of negative differential conductance in our setup, which is often attributed to the triplet blockade [52,53] and the crossed Andreev reflection (CAR) mechanism; here we show that CAR but any of the three non-local coupling mechanism can result in triplet blockade and a corresponding negative differential conductance
We have analyzed the spectrum of a quantum dots (QDs)–superconducting lead (SC)–QD system in the presence of different non-local coupling mechanisms: CAR, elastic co-tunneling (EC) and interdot coupling (IT)
Summary
Superconducting hybrid nanodevices provide a promising platform for quantum architectures. While superconductors (SCs) allow for a spatially extended coherent state, nanodevices provide the confinement of electrons into 1D or 0D. The interplay of these properties is a key ingredient of novel promising qubit realizations, such as Majorana qubits [1,2] and Andreev qubits [3]. Formed to two electrons in the normal conductor. The conversion of Cooper pairs has a special form called crossed Andreev reflection (CAR), when the two electrons originating from the Cooper pair ends up in spatially separated normal parts [4,5,6,7]
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