SUPR-CONAILGMar 13, 2025

Rapid analysis of point-contact Andreev reflection spectra via machine learning with adaptive data augmentation

arXiv:2503.10040v1h-index: 3
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This enables rapid and automated spectral analysis to accelerate research on superconductors with complex order parameters, representing an incremental improvement in efficiency for the field of superconductivity.

The study tackled the time-consuming and labor-intensive analysis of point-contact Andreev reflection spectra for superconductors by employing a convolutional neural network with adaptive data augmentation, achieving fitting parameter extraction in less than 100 ms per spectrum.

Delineating the superconducting order parameters is a pivotal task in investigating superconductivity for probing pairing mechanisms, as well as their symmetry and topology. Point-contact Andreev reflection (PCAR) measurement is a simple yet powerful tool for identifying the order parameters. The PCAR spectra exhibit significant variations depending on the type of the order parameter in a superconductor, including its magnitude ($\mathitΔ$), as well as temperature, interfacial quality, Fermi velocity mismatch, and other factors. The information on the order parameter can be obtained by finding the combination of these parameters, generating a theoretical spectrum that fits a measured experimental spectrum. However, due to the complexity of the spectra and the high dimensionality of parameters, extracting the fitting parameters is often time-consuming and labor-intensive. In this study, we employ a convolutional neural network (CNN) algorithm to create models for rapid and automated analysis of PCAR spectra of various superconductors with different pairing symmetries (conventional $s$-wave, chiral $p_x+ip_y$-wave, and $d_{x^2-y^2}$-wave). The training datasets are generated based on the Blonder-Tinkham-Klapwijk (BTK) theory and further modified and augmented by selectively incorporating noise and peaks according to the bias voltages. This approach not only replicates the experimental spectra but also brings the model's attention to important features within the spectra. The optimized models provide fitting parameters for experimentally measured spectra in less than 100 ms per spectrum. Our approaches and findings pave the way for rapid and automated spectral analysis which will help accelerate research on superconductors with complex order parameters.

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