Proximity effect (superconductivity)

Plot showing superconducting electron density versus depth in normal and superconducting layers with two coherence lengths, and .

Proximity effect or Holm–Meissner effect is a term used in the field of superconductivity to describe phenomena that occur when a superconductor (S) is placed in contact with a "normal" (N) non-superconductor. Typically the critical temperature of the superconductor is suppressed and signs of weak superconductivity are observed in the normal material over mesoscopic distances. The proximity effect is known since the pioneering work by R. Holm and W. Meissner.[1] They have observed zero resistance in SNS pressed contacts, in which two superconducting metals are separated by a thin film of a non-superconducting (i.e. normal) metal. The discovery of the supercurrent in SNS contacts is sometimes mistakenly attributed to Brian Josephson's 1962 work, yet the effect was known long before his publication and was understood as the proximity effect.[2]

  1. ^ Holm, R.; Meissner, W. (1932). "Messungen mit Hilfe von flüssigem Helium. XIII". Z. Phys. 74 (11–12): 715. Bibcode:1932ZPhy...74..715H. doi:10.1007/bf01340420. S2CID 126976182.
  2. ^ Meissner, H. (1960). "Superconductivity in contacts with interposed barriers". Phys. Rev. 117 (3): 672–680. Bibcode:1960PhRv..117..672M. doi:10.1103/physrev.117.672.

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