54 research outputs found
Current noise in high Tc granular superconductors under non-stationary conditions of current and magnetic field
We present a set of experimental results concerning the power spectrum of
current noise, detected on a granular high Tc superconductor submitted either
to a slowly varying magnetic field or to a varying current intensity.
Experiments were performed on a YBCO specimen suitably treated in order to
weaken the weak links without affecting the oxygen content of grains. The
weakening of the intergrain region allowed the use of very small magnetic
fields and currents to induce the resistive transition of the specimen and to
observe current noise. The induced noise is of the 1/f^2 type and will be
interpreted in terms of two different models. One of the model is based on the
enhancement of the noise due to the clustering of the resistive transition of
the weak links, produced by correlation effects related to the strong
nonlinearity of their Josephson type I-V characteristics. This model has been
the object of a computer simulation based on a 3D-network of Josephson-like
elements and seems suitable to explain the noise produced by current variation.
The second model explains the excess noise as produced by discontinuous
penetration of the magnetic flux inside the intergrain region. This
discontinuity is related to the field screening effect of rings made of several
superconducting weak links connecting different grains, which are alternatively
broken and restored by the current induced during flux variation, and seems
suitable to explain the larger noise produced by a varying magnetic field.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, conference contribution to "Fluctuations and
Noise", Santa Fe, New Mexico 1-4 June 200
Electrical anisotropy in high-Tc granular superconductors in a magnetic field
We propose an analytical model devoted to explain the anisotropy of the electrical resistance observed below the critical temperature in granular high-Tc superconductors submitted to a magnetic field H. Reported experimental results obtained on a YBCO sample show that the superconducting transition occurs in two stages, with a steep drop of the resistance at Tc and a subsequent, smoother decrease. In this second stage, the resistance versus temperature curve is strongly dependent not only on the field intensity, but also on the angle between H and the macroscopic current density j. We start from the assumption that the resistance below Tc is mainly due to the weak links between grains. In the model, weak links are thought of as flat surface elements separating adjacent grains. We calculate the probability for a weak link to undergo the transition to the resistive state as a function of the angle it makes with the external magnetic field H and the macroscopic current density j. In doing this, an important role is given to the strong nonuniformity of the local magnetic field within the specimen, due to the effect of the screening supercurrents flowing on the surface of the grains. Finally, we calculate the electrical resistance of the sample in the two cases H⊥j and H∥j. The predictions of this simple model turn out to be in reasonable agreement with reported experimental results obtained on a YBCO granular specimen
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