1,223 research outputs found

    Destruction of superconductivity in disordered materials : a dimensional crossover

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    The disorder-induced Superconductor-to-Insulator Transition in amorphous Nbx_{x}Si1x_{1-x} two-dimensional thin films is studied for different niobium compositions xx through a variation of the sample thickness dd. We show that the critical thickness dcd_c, separating a superconducting regime from an insulating one, increases strongly with diminishing xx, thus attaining values of over 100 {\AA}. The corresponding phase diagram in the (d,x)(d, x) plane is inferred and related to the three-dimensional situation. The two-dimensional Superconductor-to-Insulator Transition well connects with the three-dimensional Superconductor-to-Metal Transition

    Effect of annealing on the superconducting properties of a-Nb(x)Si(1-x) thin films

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    a-Nb(x)Si(1-x) thin films with thicknesses down to 25 {\AA} have been structurally characterized by TEM (Transmission Electron Microscopy) measurements. As-deposited or annealed films are shown to be continuous and homogeneous in composition and thickness, up to an annealing temperature of 500{\deg}C. We have carried out low temperature transport measurements on these films close to the superconductor-to-insulator transition (SIT), and shown a qualitative difference between the effect of annealing or composition, and a reduction of the film thickness on the superconducting properties of a-NbSi. These results question the pertinence of the sheet resistance R_square as the relevant parameter to describe the SIT.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure

    Magnetic field-induced quantum superconductor-insulator transition in Nb0.15Si0.85Nb_{0.15}Si_{0.85}

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    A study of magnetic-field tuned superconductor-insulator transitions in amorphous Nb0.15Si0.85Nb_{0.15}Si_{0.85} thin films shows that quantum superconductor-insulator transitions are characterized by an unambiguous signature -- a kink in the temperature profile of the critical magnetic field. Using this criterion, we show that the nature of the magnetic-field tuned superconductor-insulator transition depends on the orientation of the field with respect to the film. For perpendicular magnetic field, the transition is controlled by quantum fluctuations with indications for the existence of a Bose insulator; while for parallel magnetic field, the transition is classical, driven by the breaking of Cooper pairs at the temperature dependent critical field Hc2H_{c2}.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    A length scale for the superconducting Nernst signal above Tc_{c} in Nb0.15_{0.15}Si0.85_{0.85}

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    We present a study of the Nernst effect in amorphous superconducting thin films of Nb0.15_{0.15}Si0.85_{0.85}. The field dependence of the Nernst coefficient above Tc_{c} displays two distinct regimes separated by a field scale set by the Ginzburg-Landau correlation length. A single function F(ξ)F(\xi), with the correlation length as its unique argument set either by the zero-field correlation length (in the low magnetic field limit) or by the magnetic length (in the opposite limit), describes the Nernst coefficient. We conclude that the Nernst signal observed on a wide temperature (30×Tc30 \times T_c) and field (4×Bc24 \times B_{c2}) range is exclusively generated by short-lived Cooper pairs.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Background suppression in massive TeO2_2 bolometers with Neganov-Luke amplified light detectors

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    Bolometric detectors are excellent devices for the investigation of neutrinoless double-beta decay (0νββ\nu\beta\beta). The observation of such decay would demonstrate the violation of lepton number, and at the same time it would necessarily imply that neutrinos have a Majorana character. The sensitivity of cryogenic detectors based on TeO2_2 is strongly limited by the alpha background in the region of interest for the 0νββ\nu\beta\beta of 130^{130}Te. It has been demonstrated that particle discrimination in TeO2_2 bolometers is possible measuring the Cherenkov light produced by particle interactions. However an event-by-event discrimination with NTD-based light detectors has to be demonstrated. We will discuss the performance of a highly-sensitive light detector exploiting the Neganov-Luke effect for signal amplification. The detector, being operated with NTD-thermistor and coupled to a 750 g TeO2_2 crystal, shows the ability for an event-by-event identification of electron/gamma and alpha particles. The extremely low detector baseline noise, RMS 19 eV, demonstrates the possibility to enhance the sensitivity of TeO2_2-based 0νββ\nu\beta\beta experiment to an unprecedented level

    Electron glass effects in amorphous NbSi films

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    We report on non equilibrium field effect in insulating amorphous NbSi thin films having different Nb contents and thicknesses. The hallmark of an electron glass, namely the logarithmic growth of a memory dip in conductance versus gate voltage curves, is observed in all the films after a cooling from room temperature to 4.2 K. A very rich phenomenology is demonstrated. While the memory dip width is found to strongly vary with the film parameters, as was also observed in amorphous indium oxide films, screening lengths and temperature dependence of the dynamics are closer to what is observed in granular Al films. Our results demonstrate that the differentiation between continuous and discontinuous systems is not relevant to understand the discrepancies reported between various systems in the electron glass features. We suggest instead that they are not of fundamental nature and stem from differences in the protocols used and in the electrical inhomogeneity length scales within each material.Comment: Submission SciPos

    Observation of the Nernst signal generated by fluctuating Cooper pairs

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    Long-range order is destroyed in a superconductor warmed above its critical temperature (Tc). However, amplitude fluctuations of the superconducting order parameter survive and lead to a number of well established phenomena such as paraconductivity : an excess of charge conductivity due to the presence of short-lived Cooper pairs in the normal state. According to an untested theory, these pairs generate a transverse thermoelectric (Nernst) signal. In amorphous superconducting films, the lifetime of Cooper pairs exceeds the elastic lifetime of quasi-particles in a wide temperature range above Tc; consequently, the Cooper pairs Nernst signal dominate the response of the normal electrons well above Tc. In two dimensions, the magnitude of the expected signal depends only on universal constants and the superconducting coherence length, so the theory can be unambiguously tested. Here, we report on the observation of a Nernst signal in such a superconductor traced deep into the normal state. Since the amplitude of this signal is in excellent agreement with the theoretical prediction, the result provides the first unambiguous case for a Nernst effect produced by short-lived Cooper pairs

    Density Matrix Renormalization Group Applied to the Ground State of the XY-Spin-Peierls System

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    We use the density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) to map out the ground state of a XY-spin chain coupled to dispersionless phonons of frequency ω% \omega . We confirm the existence of a critical spin-phonon coupling cω0.7% \alpha _c\propto \omega ^{0.7} for the onset of the spin gap bearing the signature of a Kosterlitz-Thouless transition. We also observe a classical-quantum crossover when the spin-Peierls gap Δ\Delta is of order % \omega . In the classical regime, Δ>ω\Delta >\omega , the mean-field parameters are strongly renormalized by non-adiabatic corrections. This is the first application of the DMRG to phonons.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. To be published in PR

    Rejection of randomly coinciding events in Li2_2100^{100}MoO4_4 scintillating bolometers using light detectors based on the Neganov-Luke effect

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    Random coincidences of nuclear events can be one of the main background sources in low-temperature calorimetric experiments looking for neutrinoless double-beta decay, especially in those searches based on scintillating bolometers embedding the promising double-beta candidate 100^{100}Mo, because of the relatively short half-life of the two-neutrino double-beta decay of this nucleus. We show in this work that randomly coinciding events of the two-neutrino double decay of 100^{100}Mo in enriched Li2_2100^{100}MoO4_4 detectors can be effectively discriminated by pulse-shape analysis in the light channel if the scintillating bolometer is provided with a Neganov-Luke light detector, which can improve the signal-to-noise ratio by a large factor, assumed here at the level of 750\sim 750 on the basis of preliminary experimental results obtained with these devices. The achieved pile-up rejection efficiency results in a very low contribution, of the order of 6×105\sim 6\times10^{-5} counts/(keV\cdotkg\cdoty), to the background counting rate in the region of interest for a large volume (90\sim 90 cm3^3) Li2_2100^{100}MoO4_4 detector. This background level is very encouraging in view of a possible use of the Li2_2100^{100}MoO4_4 solution for a bolometric tonne-scale next-generation experiment as that proposed in the CUPID project

    Gap States in Dilute Magnetic Alloy Superconductors

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    We study states in the superconducting gap induced by magnetic impurities using self-consistent quantum Monte Carlo with maximum entropy and formally exact analytic continuation methods. The magnetic impurity susceptibility has different characteristics for T_{0} \alt T_{c0} and T_{0} \agt T_{c0} (T0T_{0}: Kondo temperature, Tc0T_{c0}: superconducting transition temperature) due to the crossover between a doublet and a singlet ground state. We systematically study the location and the weight of the gap states and the gap parameter as a function of T0/Tc0T_{0}/T_{c0} and the concentration of the impurities.Comment: 4 pages in ReVTeX including 4 encapsulated Postscript figure
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