4 research outputs found
Effects of nematic fluctuations on the elastic properties of iron arsenide superconductors
We demonstrate that the changes in the elastic properties of the FeAs
systems, as seen in our resonant ultrasound spectroscopy data, can be naturally
understood in terms of fluctuations of emerging nematic degrees of freedom.
Both the softening of the lattice in the normal, tetragonal phase as well as
its hardening in the superconducting phase are consistently described by our
model. Our results confirm the view that structural order is induced by
magnetic fluctuations.Comment: revised version with changed title accepted for publication in PR
Why pinning by surface irregularities can explain the peak effect in transport properties and neutron diffraction results in NbSe2 and Bi-2212 crystals?
The existence of a peak effect in transport properties (a maximum of the
critical current as function of magnetic field) is a well-known but still
intriguing feature of type II superconductors such as NbSe2 and Bi-2212. Using
a model of pinning by surface irregularities in anisotropic superconductors, we
have developed a calculation of the critical current which allows estimating
quantitatively the critical current in both the high critical current phase and
in the low critical current phase. The only adjustable parameter of this model
is the angle of the vortices at the surface. The agreement between the
measurements and the model is really very impressive. In this framework, the
anomalous dynamical properties close to the peak effect is due to co-existence
of two different vortex states with different critical currents. Recent neutron
diffraction data in NbSe2 crystals in presence of transport current support
this point of view