13 research outputs found
Quantum oscillations of resistivity in bismuth nanowires
We studied the influence of uniaxial deformation on the transport properties of bismuth wires in the wide range of temperatures. Measurements of the resistance of bismuth nanowires with several diameters and different quality reveal oscillations on the dependence of resistance under uniaxial strain at T = 4.2 K. Amplitude of oscillations is significant (38%) at helium temperature and becomes smearing at T = 77 K. Observed oscillations originate from quantum size effect. Evaluation of period of oscillations allows us to identify the groups of carriers involved in transport. Calculated periods of 42.2 and 25.9 nm satisfy approximatively the ratio 2:1 for two experimentally observed sets of oscillations from light and heavy electrons
Commensurate vortex lattices and oscillation effects in superconducting Mo/Si and W/Si multilayers
We report experimental results of the vortex lattice structure investigation in the artificial
superconducting Mo/Si and W/Si superlattices. The resistance R and critical current Ic measurements
in parallel magnetic fields have been performed as well as measurements in tilted magnetic
fields. At temperatures where condition of strong layering is satisfied the dependences Ic(H||) and
R(H||) reveal oscillation behavior. It is shown that the appearance of oscillations and of reentrant
behavior (vanishing of resistivity in definite ranges of H||) are due to the strong intrinsic pinning
and to the effect of commensurability between the vortex lattice period and multilayer wavelength.
The locations of Ic(H||) and R(H||) extrema correspond to the stable states of a commensurate vortex
lattice. Our experimental data are in good quantitative agreement with Ivlev, Kopnin, and
Pokrovsky (IKP) theory. It is shown that the values of the commensurability fields depend exclusively
on the superlattice period s and anisotropy coefficient γ and do not depend on the type of materials
used for multilayer preparation. The memory effect, i.e., dependence of the oscillation pattern
on the magnetic history of the sample, is observed. It is shown experimentally that the state of
the vortex matter in the layered superconductors is essentially different from that of type-II superconductors
with a random distribution of the pinning centers. Investigation of oscillation and
reentrance behavior may be used as a new tool for vortex lattice arrangement study in layered superconductors.
The essential advantage of this method is connected with its simplicity and with the possibility
of using it in arbitrary large fields. Investigations of the commensurate states may be used
for rather precise determination of the anisotropy coefficient γ