231 research outputs found
Dynamic Creation and Annihilation of Metastable Vortex Phase as a Source of Excess Noise
The large increase in voltage noise, commonly observed in the vicinity of the
peak-effect in superconductors, is ascribed to a novel noise mechanism. A
strongly pinned metastable disordered vortex phase, which is randomly generated
at the edges and annealed into ordered phase in the bulk, causes large
fluctuations in the integrated critical current of the sample. The excess noise
due to this dynamic admixture of two distinct phases is found to display
pronounced reentrant behavior. In the Corbino geometry the injection of the
metastable phase is prevented and, accordingly, the excess noise disappearsComment: 5 pages 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Europhysics letter
Edge and Bulk Transport in the Mixed State of a Type-II Superconductor
By comparing the voltage-current (V-I) curves obtained before and after
cutting a sample of 2H-NbSe2, we separate the bulk and edge contributions to
the transport current at various dissipation levels and derive their respective
V- I curves and critical currents. We find that the edge contribution is
thermally activated across a current dependent surface barrier. By contrast the
bulk V-I curves are linear, as expected from the free flux flow model. The
relative importance of bulk and edge contributions is found to depend on
dissipation level and sample dimensions. We further show that the peak effect
is a sharp bulk phenomenon and that it is broadened by the edge contribution
Collective effects in charge transfer within a hybrid organic-inorganic system
A collective electron transfer (ET) process was discovered by studying the
current noise in a field effect transistor with light-sensitive gate formed by
nanocrystals linked by organic molecules to its surface. Fluctuations in the ET
through the organic linker are reflected in the fluctuations of the transistor
conductivity. The current noise has an avalanche character. Critical exponents
obtained from the noise power spectra, avalanche distributions, and the
dependence of the average avalanche size on avalanche duration are consistent
with each other. A plausible model is proposed for this phenomenonComment: 15 pages 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Chiral spintronics
As spins move through a chiral electric field, the resulting spin current can acquire chirality through a spin–orbit interaction. Such spin currents are highly useful in creating spin–orbit torques that can be used to manipulate chiral topological magnetic excitations, for example, chiral magnetic domain walls or skyrmions. When the chiral domain walls form composite domain walls, via an antiferromagnetic exchange coupling, novel phenomena, including an exchange coupling torque and domain wall drag, are observed. Here, we review recent progress in the generation and functionalities of spin currents derived from or acting on chiral structures. By bringing together advances in chiral molecules, chiral magnetic structures and chiral topological matter, we provide an outlook towards potential applications
Longitudinal and transverse noise in a moving Vortex Lattice
We have studied the longitudinal and the transverse velocity fluctuations of
a moving vortex lattice (VL) driven by a transport current. They exhibit both
the same broad spectrum and the same order of magnitude. These two components
are insensitive to the velocity and to a small bulk perturbation. This means
that no bulk averaging over the disorder and no VL crystallization are
observed. This is consistently explained referring to a previously proposed
noisy flow of surface current whose elementary fluctuator is measured
isotropic.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys Rev
Experimental study of the correlation length of critical-current fluctuations in the presence of surface disorder: Probing vortex long-range interactions
We report on critical currents and voltage noise measurements in Niobium
strips in the superconducting state, in the presence of a bulk vortex lattice
() and in the surface superconducting state ().
For homogeneous surfaces, the correlation length of the current fluctuations
can be associated with the electromagnetic skin depth of vortex superficial
instabilities. The modification of the surface state by means of low energy
irradiation induces a strong modification of the critical current and of the
noise. The appearance of a corner frequency in the spectral domain can be
linked with the low wave-vectors of the artificial corrugation. Since this
latter occurs only for , we propose that the long-range
interactions allow the correlation length to extend up to values imposed by the
surface topography.Comment: accepted for publication in PR
Magnetization Decay due to Vortex Phase Boundary Motion in BSCCO
We identify a new regime of decay of the irreversible magnetization in clean
BiSrCaCuO crystals, at induction values close to the
``second peak field'' at which the bulk critical current density steeply
increases. A time window is identified during which the decay of the induction
is controlled by the slow propagation of the phase transformation front across
the sample.Comment: 2 pages, 3 figures Paper submitted to the conference proceedings of
M2S-2000 Houston T
V-I characteristics in the vicinity of order-disorder transition in vortex matter
The shape of the V-I characteristics leading to a peak in the differential
resistance r_d=dV/dI in the vicinity of the order-disorder transition in NbSe2
is investigated. r_d is large when measured by dc current. However, for a small
Iac on a dc bias r_d decreases rapidly with frequency, even at a few Hz, and
displays a large out-of-phase signal. In contrast, the ac response increases
with frequency in the absence of dc bias. These surprisingly opposite phenomena
and the peak in r_d are shown to result from a dynamic coexistence of two
vortex matter phases rather than from the commonly assumed plastic depinning.Comment: 12 pages 4 figures. Accepted for publication in PRB rapi
Noise in Vortex Matter
URL: http://www-spht.cea.fr/articles/S03/018 (sur invitation).International audienceThe large increase in the flux-flow voltage noise, commonly observed in the vicinity of the peak-effect in super- conductors, is ascribed to a novel noise mechanism. The mechanism consists in random injection of the strongly pinned metastable disordered vortex phase through the sample edges and its subsequent random annealing into the weakly pinned ordered phase in the bulk. This results in large critical current fluctuations causing strong vortex velocity fluctuations. The excess noise due to this dynamic admixture of two vortex phases is found to dis- play pronounced reentrant behavior. In the Corbino geometry the injection of the metastable phase is prevented and, accordingly, the excess noise disappears. Excess flux-flow noise in the peak effect regime is dominated by vortex velocity fluctuations while the density fluctuations, frequently considered in the conventional flux-flow noise models, are negligibly weak. Strong nongaussian fluctuations are associated with S-shaped current-voltage characteristics. The spectral properties of the noise reflect the first order filter-like response of the dynamically coexisting vortex phases. The cutoff frequency in the spectra corresponds to the time-of-flight of vortices through the disordered part of the sample
- …