63 research outputs found
Reconstruction of {\AA}ngstr{\o}m resolution exit-waves by the application of drift-corrected phase-shifting off-axis electron holography
Phase-shifting electron holography is an excellent method to reveal electron
wave phase information with very high phase sensitivity over a large range of
spatial frequencies. It circumvents the limiting trade-off between fringe
spacing and visibility of standard off-axis holography. Previous
implementations have been limited by the independent drift of biprism and
sample. We demonstrate here an advanced drift correction scheme for the
hologram series that allow to obtain reliable phase information at the 1 {\AA}
information limit of the used Titan 80-300 kV environmental transmission
electron microscope using a single biprism at moderate voltage of 250 V. The
obtained phase and amplitude information is validated at a thin Pt sample by
use of multislice image simulation with the frozen lattice approximation and
shows excellent agreement. The presented method drastically reduces the
hardware requirements and thus allows to achieve high resolution in off-axis
holography in various instruments including those for in-situ applications. A
software implementation for the acquisition, calibration and reconstruction is
provided
Significance of solutions of the inverse Biot-Savart problem in thick superconductors
The evaluation of current distributions in thick superconductors from field
profiles near the sample surface is investigated theoretically. A simple model
of a cylindrical sample, in which only circular currents are flowing, reduces
the inversion to a linear least squares problem, which is analyzed by singular
value decomposition. Without additional assumptions about the current
distribution (e.g. constant current over the sample thickness), the condition
of the problem is very bad, leading to unrealistic results. However, any
additional assumption strongly influences the solution and thus renders the
solutions again questionable. These difficulties are unfortunately inherent to
the inverse Biot-Savart problem in thick superconductors and cannot be avoided
by any models or algorithms
Influence of vortex-vortex interaction on critical currents across low-angle grain boundaries in YBa2Cu3O7-delta thin films
Low-angle grain boundaries with misorientation angles theta < 5 degrees in
optimally doped thin films of YBCO are investigated by magnetooptical imaging.
By using a numerical inversion scheme of Biot-Savart's law the critical current
density across the grain boundary can be determined with a spatial resolution
of about 5 micrometers. Detailed investigation of the spatially resolved flux
density and current density data shows that the current density across the
boundary varies with varying local flux density. Combining the corresponding
flux and current pattern it is found that there exists a universal dependency
of the grain boundary current on the local flux density. A change in the local
flux density means a variation in the flux line-flux line distance. With this
knowledge a model is developped that explains the flux-current relation by
means of magnetic vortex-vortex interaction.Comment: 7 pages, 14 figure
Anisotropic, non-monotonic behavior of the superconducting critical current in thin YBa2Cu3O7-d films on vicinal SrTiO3 surfaces
The critical current density of epitaxial YBCO films grown on vicinal SrTiO3
substrates was investigated by electrical transport measurements along and
across the steps of the SrTiO3 surface for a range of temperatures of 10 K to
85 K and in applied magnetic fields varying from 0 to 14 T. For vicinal angles
of 4 and 8 degrees, we found evidence of enhanced pinning in the longitudinal
direction at low magnetic fields for a wide region of temperatures and
attribute this phenomenon to anti-phase boundaries in the YBCO film. The
transverse Jc data showed a peak in the Jc(H) curve at low magnetic fields,
which was explained on the basis of magnetic interaction between Abrikosov and
Abrikosov-Josephson vortices. The in-plane Jc anisotropy observed for vicinal
angles of 0.4 degrees was reversed with respect to the 8 degree and 4 degree
samples. This phenomenon was interpreted on the basis of strain induced in the
YBCO film by the stepped substrate's surface.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Local threshold field for dendritic instability in superconducting MgB2 films
Using magneto-optical imaging the phenomenon of dendritic flux penetration in
superconducting films was studied. Flux dendrites were abruptly formed in a 300
nm thick film of MgB2 by applying a perpendicular magnetic field. Detailed
measurements of flux density distributions show that there exists a local
threshold field controlling the nucleation and termination of the dendritic
growth. At 4 K the local threshold field is close to 12 mT in this sample,
where the critical current density is 10^7 A/cm^2. The dendritic instability in
thin films is believed to be of thermo-magnetic origin, but the existence of a
local threshold field, and its small value are features that distinctly
contrast the thermo-magnetic instability (flux jumps) in bulk superconductors.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Strong Pinning in High Temperature Superconductors
Detailed measurements of the critical current density jc of YBa2Cu3O7 films
grown by pulsed laser deposition reveal the increase of jc as function of the
filmthickness. Both this thickness dependence and the field dependence of the
critical current are consistently described using a generalization of the
theory of strong pinning of Ovchinnikov and Ivlev [Phys. Rev. B 43, 8024
(1991)]. From the model, we deduce values of the defect density (10^21 m^-3)
and the elementary pinning force, which are in good agreement with the
generally accepted values for Y2O3-inclusions. In the absence of clear evidence
that the critical current is determined by linear defects or modulations of the
film thickness, our model provides an alternative explanation for the rather
universal field dependence of the critical current density found in YBa2Cu3O7
films deposited by different methods.Comment: 11 pages; 8 Figures; Published Phys. Rev. B 66, 024523 (2002
Interplay of dendritic avalanches and gradual flux penetration in superconducting MgB2 films
Magneto-optical imaging was used to study a zero-field-cooled MgB2 film at
9.6K where in a slowly increasing field the flux penetrates by abrupt formation
of large dendritic structures. Simultaneously, a gradual flux penetration takes
place, eventually covering the dendrites, and a detailed analysis of this
process is reported. We find an anomalously high gradient of the flux density
across a dendrite branch, and a peak value that decreases as the applied field
goes up. This unexpected behaviour is reproduced by flux creep simulations
based on the non-local field-current relation in the perpendicular geometry.
The simulations also provide indirect evidence that flux dendrites are formed
at an elevated local temperature, consistent with a thermo-magnetic mechanism
of the instabilityComment: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Supercond. Sci. Techno
The temperature-dependent magnetization profile across an epitaxial bilayer of ferromagnetic La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 and superconducting YBa2Cu3O7-d
Epitaxial bilayers of ferromagnetic La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 (LCMO) and superconducting
YBa2Cu3O7-d (YBCO) have been grown on single-crystalline SrTiO3 (STO)
substrates by pulsed laser deposition. The Manganese magnetization profile
across the FM layer has been determined with high spatial resolution at low
temperatures by X-ray resonant magnetic reflectivity (XRMR). It is found that
not only the adjacent superconductor but also the substrate underneath
influences the magnetization of the LCMO film at the interfaces at low
temperatures. Both effects can be investigated individually by XRMR
Resolution of two-dimensional Currents in Superconductors from a two-dimensional magnetic field measurement by the method of regularization
The problem of reconstructing a two-dimensional (2D) current distribution in
a superconductor from a 2D magnetic field measurement is recognized as a
first-kind integral equation and resolved using the method of Regularization.
Regularization directly addresses the inherent instability of this inversion
problem for non-exact (noisy) data. Performance of the technique is evaluated
for different current distributions and for data with varying amounts of added
noise. Comparisons are made to other methods, and the present method is
demonstrated to achieve a better regularizing (noise filtering) effect while
also employing the generalized-cross validation (GCV) method to choose the
optimal regularization parameter from the data, without detailed knowledge of
the true (and generally unknown) solution. It is also shown that clean,
noiseless data is an ineffective test of an inversion algorithm.Comment: To appear in the Physical Review B. Some text/figure additions and
modification
Dynamics of the magnetic flux trapped in fractal clusters of normal phase in a superconductor
The influence of geometry and morphology of superconducting structure on
critical currents and magnetic flux trapping in percolative type-II
superconductor is considered. The superconductor contains the clusters of a
normal phase, which act as pinning centers. It is found that such clusters have
significant fractal properties. The main features of these clusters are studied
in detail: the cluster statistics is analyzed; the fractal dimension of their
boundary is estimated; the distribution of critical currents is obtained, and
its peculiarities are explored. It is examined thoroughly how the finite
resolution capacity of the cluster geometrical size measurement affects the
estimated value of fractal dimension. The effect of fractal properties of the
normal phase clusters on the electric field arising from magnetic flux motion
is investigated in the case of an exponential distribution of cluster areas.
The voltage-current characteristics of superconductors in the resistive state
for an arbitrary fractal dimension are obtained. It is revealed that the
fractality of the boundaries of the normal phase clusters intensifies the
magnetic flux trapping and thereby raises the critical current of a
superconductor.Comment: revtex, 16 pages with 1 table and 5 figures; text and figures are
improved; more detailed version with geometric probability analisys of the
distribution of entry points into weak links over the perimeter of a normal
phase clusters and one additional figure is published in Phys.Rev.B;
alternative e-mail of author is [email protected]
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