DC and AC Josephson Effect in a Superconductor-Luttinger Liquid-Superconductor System
Preprint
- 21 September 1995
Abstract
We calculate both the DC and the AC Josephson current through a one-dimensional system of interacting electrons, connected to two superconductors by tunnel junctions. We treat the (repulsive) Coulomb interaction in the framework of the one-channel, spin-$1/2$ Luttinger model. The Josephson current is obtained for two geometries of experimental relevance: a quantum wire and a ring. At zero temperature, the critical current is found to decay algebraically with increasing distance $d$ between the junctions. The decay is characterized by an exponent which depends on the strength of the interaction. At finite temperatures $T$, lower than the superconducting transition temperature $T_c$, there is a crossover from algebraic to exponential decay of the critical current as a function of $d$, at a distance of the order of $\hbar v_F/k_B T$. Moreover, the dependence of critical current on temperature shows non-monotonic behavior. If the Luttinger liquid is confined to a ring of circumference $L$, coupled capacitively to a gate voltage and threaded by a magnetic flux, the Josephson current shows remarkable parity effects under the variation of these parameters. For some values of the gate voltage and applied flux, the ring acts as a $\pi$-junction. These features are robust against thermal fluctuations up to temperatures on the order of $\hbar v_F/k_B L$. For the wire-geometry, we have also studied the AC-Josephson effect. The amplitude and the phase of the time-dependent Josephson current are affected by electron-electron interactions. Specifically, the amplitude shows pronounced oscillations as a function of the bias voltage due to the difference between the velocities of spin and charge excitations in the Luttinger liquid. Therefore, the AC Josephson effect can be used as a tool for the observation of
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All Related Versions
- Version 1, 1995-09-21, ArXiv
- Published version: Physical Review B, 53 (10), 6653.
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