https://doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2003-00016-8
Proximity effect in multiterminal hybrid structures
Centre de Recherches sur les Très basses
températures (CRTBT) (UPR 5001 du CNRS,
Laboratoire conventionné avec l'Université Joseph Fourier) ,
BP 166X, 38042 Grenoble Cedex, France
Corresponding author: a melin@grenoble.cnrs.fr
Received:
6
May
2002
Revised:
20
November
2002
Published online:
27
January
2003
We consider the proximity effect
in multiterminal ferromagnet/superconductor (FSF) hybrid structures
in which two or three electrodes are connected to a superconductor.
We show that two competing
effects take place in these systems:
(i) pair breaking effects due
to the response to the exchange field induced in
the superconductor; (ii) a reduction of
the superconducting order parameter at the interface that takes place already
in NS junctions. We focus on this second effect
that dominates if the thickness of the S layer
is small enough. We consider
several single-channel electrodes connected to the same site.
We calculate the superconducting order parameter and the local density of state (LDOS).
With two ferromagnetic electrodes connected
to a superconductor we find that the superconducting order parameter in the
ferromagnetic alignment is larger than the superconducting order parameter
in the antiferromagnetic alignment (), in agreement with
[Eur. Phys. J. B 25, 373 (2002)]. If a third
spin polarized electrode is connected to a
superconductor we find that
can change sign as the transparency of the third electrode
increases. This can be understood from the fact that
the superconducting order parameter is reduced if pair correlations
among the ferromagnetic electrodes increase.
If the two ferromagnetic electrodes are within a finite
distance we find Friedel oscillations in the
Gorkov function but we still obtain
.
PACS: 74.80.Fp – Point contacts; SN and SNS junctions / 72.10.Bg – General formulation of transport theory / 74.50.+r – Proximity effects, weak links, tunneling phenomena, and Josephson effects / 74.80.Dm – Superconducting layer structures: superlattices, heterojunctions, and multilayers
© EDP Sciences, Società Italiana di Fisica, Springer-Verlag, 2003