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Topologically nontrivial and trivial zero modes in chiral molecules

Authors :
Chen, Xiao-Feng
Luo, Wenchen
Fang, Tie-Feng
Paltiel, Yossi
Millo, Oded
Guo, Ai-Min
Sun, Qing-Feng
Source :
Physical Review B 108, 035401 (2023)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Recently, electron transport along chiral molecules has been attracting extensive interest and several intriguing phenomena have been reported in recent experiments, such as the emergence of zero-bias conductance peaks upon the adsorption of single-helical protein on superconducting films. Here, we study theoretically the electron transport through a two-terminal single-helical protein sandwiched between a superconducting electrode and a normal-metal one in the presence of a perpendicular magnetic field. As the proximity-induced superconductivity attenuates with the distance from superconducting media, the pairing potential along the helix axis of the single-helical protein is expected to decrease exponentially, which is characterized by the decay exponent $\lambda$ and closely related to the experiments. Our results indicate that (i) a zero-bias conductance peak of $2e^2/h$ appears at zero temperature and the peak height (width) decreases (broadens) with increasing temperature, and (ii) this zero-bias peak can split into two peaks, which are in agreement with the experiments [see, e.g., Nano Lett. 19, 5167 (2019)]. Remarkably, Majorana zero modes are observed in this protein-superconductor setup in a wide range of model parameters, as manifested by the $Z_2$ topological invariant and the Majoroana oscillation. Interestingly, a specific region is demonstrated for decaying superconductivity, where topologically nontrivial and trivial zero modes coexist and the bandgap remains constant. With increasing the pairing potential, the topologically nontrivial zero modes will transform to the trivial ones without any bandgap closing-reopening, and the critical pairing potential of the phase transition attenuates exponentially with $\lambda$. Additionally, one of the two zero modes can be continuously shifted from one end of the protein toward the other end contacted by the normal-metal electrode.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Physical Review B 108, 035401 (2023)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2208.13352
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.108.035401