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Absence of evidence for chiral Majorana modes in quantum anomalous Hall-superconductor devices.

Morteza KayyalhaDi XiaoRuoxi ZhangJaeho ShinJue JiangFei WangYi-Fan ZhaoRun XiaoLing ZhangKajetan M FijalkowskiPankaj MandalMartin WinnerleinCharles GouldQi LiLaurens W MolenkampMoses H W ChanNitin SamarthCui-Zu Chang
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
A quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) insulator coupled to an s-wave superconductor is predicted to harbor chiral Majorana modes. A recent experiment interprets the half-quantized two-terminal conductance plateau as evidence for these modes in a millimeter-size QAH-niobium hybrid device. However, non-Majorana mechanisms can also generate similar signatures, especially in disordered samples. Here, we studied similar hybrid devices with a well-controlled and transparent interface between the superconductor and the QAH insulator. When the devices are in the QAH state with well-aligned magnetization, the two-terminal conductance is always half-quantized. Our experiment provides a comprehensive understanding of the superconducting proximity effect observed in QAH-superconductor hybrid devices and shows that the half-quantized conductance plateau is unlikely to be induced by chiral Majorana fermions in samples with a highly transparent interface.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • capillary electrophoresis
  • ionic liquid