- Uri, Aviram;
- Meltzer, Alexander Y;
- Anahory, Yonathan;
- Embon, Lior;
- Lachman, Ella O;
- Halbertal, Dorri;
- Hr, Naren;
- Myasoedov, Yuri;
- Huber, Martin E;
- Young, Andrea F;
- Zeldov, Eli
We present a new nanoscale superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) whose interference pattern can be shifted electrically in situ. The device consists of a nanoscale four-terminal-four-junction SQUID fabricated at the apex of a sharp pipet using a self-aligned three-step deposition of Pb. In contrast to conventional two-terminal-two-junction SQUIDs that display optimal sensitivity when flux biased to about a quarter of the flux quantum, the additional terminals and junctions allow optimal sensitivity at arbitrary applied flux, thus eliminating the magnetic field "blind spots". We demonstrate spin sensitivity of 5 to 8 μB/Hz1/2 over a continuous field range of 0 to 0.5 T with promising applications for nanoscale scanning magnetic imaging.