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      A spin triplet supercurrent through the half-metallic ferromagnet CrO2

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          Abstract

          In general, conventional superconductivity should not occur in a ferromagnet, though it has been seen in iron under pressure. Moreover, theory predicts that the current is always carried by pairs of electrons in a spin singlet state, so conventional superconductivity decays very rapidly when in contact with a ferromagnet, which normally prohibits the existence of singlet pairs. It has been predicted that this rapid spatial decay would not occur when spin triplet superconductivity could be induced in the ferromagnet. Here we report a Josephson supercurrent through the strong ferromagnet CrO2, from which we infer that it is a spin triplet supercurrent. Our experimental setup is different from those envisaged in the earlier predictions, but we conclude that the underlying physical explanation for our result is a conversion from spin singlet to spin triplets at the interface. The supercurrent can be switched with the direction of the magnetization, analogous to spin valve transistors, and therefore could enable magnetization-controlled Josephson junctions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          15 February 2006
          Article
          10.1038/nature04499
          cond-mat/0602359
          0ba8e0f7-bcab-41bc-a740-ed65ed1736f5
          History
          Custom metadata
          Nature 439, 825 (2006)
          14 pages, including 3 figures
          cond-mat.supr-con cond-mat.mes-hall cond-mat.mtrl-sci

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