78 research outputs found
In-plane magnetic field phase diagram of superconducting Sr2RuO4
We develop the Ginzburg - Landau theory of the upper critical field in the
basal plane of a tetragonal multiband metal in two-component superconducting
state. It is shown that typical for the two component superconducting state the
upper critical field basal plane anisotropy and the phase transition splitting
still exist in a multiband case. However, the value of anisotropy can be
effectively smaller than in the single band case. The results are discussed in
the application to the superconducting Sr2RuO4.Comment: 4 pages, no figure
Effects of thermal fluctuations on the magnetic behavior of mesoscopic superconductors
We study the influence of thermal fluctuations on the magnetic behavior of
square mesoscopic superconductors. The strength of thermal fluctuations are
parameterized using the Ginzburg number, which is small () in low- superconductors and large in high- superconductors
(). For low- mesoscopic superconductors we found that
the meta-stable states due to the surface barrier have a large half-life time,
which leads to the hysteresis in the magnetization curves as observed
experimentally. A very different behavior appears for high- mesoscopic
superconductors where thermally activated vortex entrance/exit through surface
barriers is frequent. This leads to a reduction of the magnetization and a
non-integer average number of flux quanta penetrating the superconductor. The
magnetic field dependence of the probability for the occurrence of the
different vortex states and the fluctuations in the number of vortices are
studied.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Fractional-flux vortices and spin superfluidity in triplet superconductors
We discuss a novel type of fractional flux vortices along with integer flux
vortices in Kosterlitz-Thouless transitions in a triplet superconductor. We
show that under certain conditions a spin-triplet superconductor should exhibit
a novel state of {\it spin superfluidity} without superconductivity.Comment: Physical Review Lettes, in print. v2: references added, v3:
discussion of several points extended according to referee request. Latest
updates and links to related papers are available at my homepage
http://people.ccmr.cornell.edu/~egor
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
Metals in high magnetic field: a new universality class of Fermi liquids
Parquet equations, describing the competition between superconducting and
density-wave instabilities, are solved for a three-dimensional isotropic metal
in a high magnetic field when only the lowest Landau level is filled. In the
case of a repulsive interaction between electrons, a phase transition to the
density-wave state is found at finite temperature. In the opposite case of
attractive interaction, no phase transition is found. With decreasing
temperature , the effective vertex of interaction between electrons
renormalizes toward a one-dimensional limit in a self-similar way with the
characteristic length (transverse to the magnetic field) decreasing as
( is a cutoff). Correlation functions have
new forms, previously unknown for conventional one-dimensional or
three-dimensional Fermi-liquids.Comment: 13 pages + 4 figures (included
On the sample size dependence of the critical current density in MgB superconductors
Sample size dependent critical current density has been observed in magnesium
diboride superconductors. At high fields, larger samples provide higher
critical current densities, while at low fields, larger samples give rise to
lower critical current densities. The explanation for this surprising result is
proposed in this study based on the electric field generated in the
superconductors. The dependence of the current density on the sample size has
been derived as a power law ( is the factor
characterizing curve ). This dependence provides one with
a new method to derive the factor and can also be used to determine the
dependence of the activation energy on the current density.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages, 5 figure
Suppression of surface barrier in superconductors by columnar defects
We investigate the influence of columnar defects in layered superconductors
on the thermally activated penetration of pancake vortices through the surface
barrier. Columnar defects, located near the surface, facilitate penetration of
vortices through the surface barrier, by creating ``weak spots'', through which
pancakes can penetrate into the superconductor. Penetration of a pancake
mediated by an isolated column, located near the surface, is a two-stage
process involving hopping from the surface to the column and the detachment
from the column into the bulk; each stage is controlled by its own activation
barrier. The resulting effective energy is equal to the maximum of those two
barriers. For a given external field there exists an optimum location of the
column for which the barriers for the both processes are equal and the
reduction of the effective penetration barrier is maximal. At high fields the
effective penetration field is approximately two times smaller than in
unirradiated samples. We also estimate the suppression of the effective
penetration field by column clusters. This mechanism provides further reduction
of the penetration field at low temperatures.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Collective pinning of a frozen vortex liquid in ultrathin superconducting YBa_2Cu_3O_7 films
The linear dynamic response of the two-dimensional (2D) vortex medium in
ultrathin YBa_2Cu_3O_7 films was studied by measuring their ac sheet impedance
Z over a broad range of frequencies \omega. With decreasing temperature the
dissipative component of Z exhibits, at a temperature T*(\omega) well above the
melting temperature of a 2D vortex crystal, a crossover from a thermally
activated regime involving single vortices to a regime where the response has
features consistent with a description in terms of a collectively pinned vortex
manifold. This suggests the idea of a vortex liquid which, below T*(\omega),
appears to be frozen at the time scales 1/\omega of the experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Effects of Magnetic Order on the Upper Critical Field of UPt
I present a Ginzburg-Landau theory for hexagonal oscillations of the upper
critical field of UPt near . The model is based on a
representation for the superconducting order parameter,
, coupled to an in-plane AFM order parameter,
. Hexagonal anisotropy of arises from the weak in-plane
anisotropy energy of the AFM state and the coupling of the superconducting
order parameter to the staggered field. The model explains the important
features of the observed hexagonal anisotropy [N. Keller, {\it et al.}, Phys.
Rev. Lett. {\bf 73}, 2364 (1994).] including: (i) the small magnitude, (ii)
persistence of the oscillations for , and (iii) the change in
sign of the oscillations for and (the temperature at the
tetracritical point). I also show that there is a low-field crossover
(observable only very near ) below which the oscillations should vanish.Comment: 9 pages in a RevTex (3.0) file plus 2 postscript figures (uuencoded).
Submitted to Physical Review B (December 20, 1994)
- …