Spin-active interfaces and unconventional pairing in half-metalmidsuperconductor junctions
read the original abstract
We study the physical properties of a half-metallic ferromagnet$\mid$superconductor (HM$\mid$S) bilayer, allowing for an arbitrary bulk pairing symmetry of the superconductor and spin-dependent processes at the interface. In particular, we study how the possibility of unconventional pairing such as $p$- and d-wave and a spin-active interface influence the \textit{(i)} conductance spectra, \textit{(ii)} proximity effect, and \textit{(iii)} local density of states of such a bilayer. Our calculation is done both analytically and numerically in the ballistic limit, using both a continuum- and lattice-model. It is found that the spin-dependent phase-shifts occuring at the HM$\mid$S interface seriously influence all of the aforementioned phenomena. We explain our results in terms of Andreev reflection in the presence of a spin-active interface, allowing for both spin-filtering and spin-mixing processes. We demonstrate how the surface-bound states induced by the anisotropy of the superconducting order parameter at the HM$\mid$S interface are highly sensitive to these spin-dependent processes. Our results can be directly tested experimentally using STM-measurements and/or point-contact spectroscopy.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.