56 research outputs found
Dipole-dipole interaction of Josephson diamagnetic moments
The role of dipole-dipole interaction between Josephson diamagnetic moments
is considered within a model system of two clusters (each cluster contains
three weakly connected superconducting grains). The sign of the resulting
critical current is shown to depend on the orientation between clusters,
allowing for both 0 and type junctions behavior. The possibility of the
experimental verification of the model predictions is discussed
Superconductivity and Stoichiometry in the BSCCO-family Materials
We report on magnetization, c-axis and ab-plane resistivity, critical
current, electronic band structure and superconducting gap properties. Bulk
measurements and photoemission data were taken on similar samples.Comment: 4 pages, latex, to be published in Journal of Superconductivity. two
figures available from Jian Ma at [email protected]
Ergodic versus nonergodic behavior in oxygen deficient high-T_c superconductors
The oxygen defects induced phase transition from nonergodic to ergodic state
in superconductors with intragrain granularity is considered within the
superconductive glass model. The model predictions are found to be in a
qualitative agreement with some experimental observations in deoxygenated
high-T_c single crystals
Aging and memory phenomena in magnetic and transport properties of vortex matter: a brief review
There is mounting experimental evidence that strong off-equilibrium
phenomena, such as ``memory'' or ``aging'' effects, play a crucial role in the
physics of vortices in type II superconductors. We give a short review, based
on a recently introduced schematic vortex model, of current progresses in
understanding out of equilibrium vortex behaviours. We develop a unified
description of ``memory'' phenomena in magnetic and transport properties, such
as magnetisation loops and their ``anomalous'' 2nd peak, logarithmic creep,
``anomalous'' finite creep rate in the limit of vanishing temperature,
``memory'' and ``irreversibility'' in I-V characteristics, time dependent
critical currents, ``rejuvenation'' and ``aging'' of the system response.Comment: updated versio
Theory of plastic vortex creep
We develop a theory for plastic flux creep in a topologically disordered
vortex solid phase in type-II superconductors. We propose a detailed
description of the plastic vortex creep of the dislocated, amorphous vortex
glass in terms of motion of dislocations driven by a transport current . The
{\em plastic barriers} show power-law divergence at
small drives with exponents for single dislocation creep and for creep of dislocation bundles. The suppression of the creep rate is a
hallmark of the transition from the topologically ordered vortex lattice to an
amorphous vortex glass, reflecting a jump in from ,
characterizing creep in the topologically ordered vortex lattice near the
transition, to its plastic values. The lower creep rates explain the observed
increase in apparent critical currents in the dislocated vortex glass.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Magnetic field induced polarization effects in intrinsically granular superconductors
Based on the previously suggested model of nanoscale dislocations induced
Josephson junctions and their arrays, we study the magnetic field induced
electric polarization effects in intrinsically granular superconductors. In
addition to a new phenomenon of chemomagnetoelectricity, the model predicts
also a few other interesting effects, including charge analogues of Meissner
paramagnetism (at low fields) and "fishtail" anomaly (at high fields). The
conditions under which these effects can be experimentally measured in
non-stoichiometric high-T_c superconductors are discussed.Comment: 10 pages (REVTEX), 5 EPS figures; revised version accepted for
publication in JET
Pinning of spiral fluxons by giant screw dislocations in YBa_2Cu_3O_7 single crystals: Josephson analog of the fishtail effect
By using a highly sensitive homemade AC magnetic susceptibility technique,
the magnetic flux penetration has been measured in YBa_2Cu_3O_7 single crystals
with giant screw dislocations (having the structure of the Archimedean spirals)
exhibiting a=3 spiral turnings, the pitch b=18.7 microns and the step height
c=1.2nm (the last parameter is responsible for creation of extended weak-link
structure around the giant defects). The magnetic field applied parallel to the
surface enters winding around the weak-link regions of the screw in the form of
the so-called spiral Josephson fluxons characterized by the temperature
dependent pitch b_f(T). For a given temperature, a stabilization of the fluxon
structure occurs when b_f(T) matches b (meaning an optimal pinning by the screw
dislocations) and manifests itself as a pronounced low-field peak in the
dependence of the susceptibility on magnetic field (applied normally to the
surface) in the form resembling the high-field (Abrikosov) fishtail effect.Comment: see also http://www.jetpletters.ac.ru/ps/1886/article_28701.shtm
Intrinsic pinning property of FeSe0.5Te0.5
The intrinsic pinning properties of FeSe0.5Te0.5, which is the superconductor
with Tc of about 14 K, were studied by the analysis of magnetization curves by
the extended critical state model. In the magnetization measurements by SQUID
magnetometer, the external magnetic fields were applied parallel and
perpendicular to c-axis of the sample. The critical current density Jc's under
the perpendicular field of 1 T were estimated by using the Kimishima model as
about 1.6 x 10^4, 8.8 x 10^3, 4.1 x 10^3, and 1.5 x 10^3 A/cm2 at 5, 7, 9, and
11 K, respectively, and the temperature dependence of Jc could be fitted with
the exponential law of Jc(0)xexp(-{\alpha}T /Tc) up to 9 K and power law of
Jc(0)x(1-T / Tc)n near Tc.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
Static and dynamic coupling transitions of vortex lattices in disordered anisotropic superconductors
We use three-dimensional molecular dynamics simulations of magnetically
interacting pancake vortices to study vortex matter in disordered, highly
anisotropic materials such as BSCCO. We observe a sharp 2D-3D transition from
vortex lines to decoupled pancakes as a function of relative interlayer
coupling strength, with an accompanying large increase in the critical current
remniscent of a second peak effect. We find that decoupled pancakes, when
driven, simultaneously recouple and order into a crystalline-like state at high
drives. We construct a dynamic phase diagram and show that the dynamic
recoupling transition is associated with a double peak in dV/dI.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figure
Pinning-induced transition to disordered vortex phase in layered superconductors
Destruction of the vortex lattice by random point pinning is considered as a
mechanism of the ``second peak'' transition observed experimentally in weakly
coupled layered high temperature superconductors. The transition field
separating the topologically ordered quasilattice from the amorphous vortex
configuration is strongly influenced by the layered structure and by the
nonlocal nature of the vortex tilt energy due to the magnetic interlayer
coupling. We found three different regimes of transition depending on the
relative strength of the Josephson and magnetic couplings. The regimes can be
distinguished by the dependence of the transition fieldComment: 8 pages, 3 Postscript figures. Accepted to Phys. Rev.B. (regular
article
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