468 research outputs found

    Non-monotonic pressure evolution of the upper critical field in superconducting FeSe

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    The pressure dependence of the upper critical field, Hc2,cH_\textrm{c2,c}, of single crystalline FeSe was studied using measurements of the inter-plane resistivity, ρc\rho_{\textrm{c}} in magnetic fields parallel to tetragonal cc-axis. Hc2,c(T)H_\textrm{c2,c}(T) curves obtained under hydrostatic pressures up to 1.561.56 GPa, the range over which the superconducting transition temperature, TcT_\textrm{c}, of FeSe exhibits a non-monotonic dependence with local maximum at p1p_1\approx 0.8 GPa and local minimum at p2p_2\approx 1.2 GPa. The slope of the upper critical field at TcT_\textrm{c}, (dHc2,c/dT)Tc\left(\textrm{d}H_\text{c2,c}/\textrm{d}T\right)_{T_\textrm{c}}, also exhibits a non-monotonic pressure dependence with distinct changes at p1p_1 and p2p_2. For p<p1p<p_1 the slope can be described within multi-band orbital model. For both p1p2p_1p_2 the slope is in good quantitative agreement with a single band, orbital Helfand-Werthamer theory with Fermi velocities determined from Shubnikov-de Haas measurements. This finding indicates that Fermi surface changes are responsible for the local minimum of Tc(p)T_\textrm{c}(p) at p2p_2\approx 1.2 GPa.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Nature of 45 degree vortex lattice reorientation in tetragonal superconductors

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    The transformation of the vortex lattice in a tetragonal superconductor which consists of its 45 degree reorientation relative to the crystal axes is studied using the nonlocal London model. It is shown that the reorientation occurs as two successive second order (continuous) phase transitions. The transition magnetic fields are calculated for a range of parameters relevant for borocarbide superconductors in which the reorientation has been observed

    The puzzle of 90 degree reorientation in the vortex lattice of borocarbide superconductors

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    We explain 90 degree reorientation in the vortex lattice of borocarbide superconductors on the basis of a phenomenological extension of the nonlocal London model that takes full account of the symmetry of the system. We propose microscopic mechanisms that could generate the correction terms and point out the important role of the superconducting gap anisotropy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 eps figure

    Influence of nonlocal electrodynamics on the anisotropic vortex pinning in YNi2B2CYNi_2B_2C

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    We have studied the pinning force density Fp of YNi_2B_2C superconductors for various field orientations. We observe anisotropies both between the c-axis and the basal plane and within the plane, that cannot be explained by usual mass anisotropy. For magnetic field HcH \parallel c, the reorientation structural transition in the vortex lattice due to nonlocality, which occurs at a field H11kOeH_1 \sim 1kOe, manifests itself as a kink in Fp(H). When HcH \bot c, Fp is much larger and has a quite different H dependence, indicating that other pinning mechanisms are present. In this case the signature of nonlocal effects is the presence of a fourfold periodicity of Fp within the basal plane.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Four-fold basal plane anisotropy of the nonlocal magnetization of YNi2B2C

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    Studies of single crystal YNi2B2C have revealed a four-fold anisotropy of the equilibrium magnetization in the square crystallographic basal plane. This pi/2 periodicity occurs deep in the superconductive mixed state. In this crystal symmetry, an ordinary superconductive mass anisotropy (as in usual London theory) allows only a constant, isotropic response. In contrast, the experimental results are well described by generalized London theory incorporating non-local electrodynamics, as needed for this clean, intermediate-k superconductor.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Giant microwave absorption in fine powders of superconductors

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    Enhanced microwave absorption, larger than that in the normal state, is observed in fine grains of type-II superconductors (MgB2_2 and K3_3C60_{60}) for magnetic fields as small as a few %\% of the upper critical field. The effect is predicted by the theory of vortex motion in type-II superconductors, however its direct observation has been elusive due to skin-depth limitations; conventional microwave absorption studies employ larger samples where the microwave magnetic field exclusion significantly lowers the absorption. We show that the enhancement is observable in grains smaller than the penetration depth. A quantitative analysis on K3_3C60_{60} in the framework of the Coffey--Clem (CC) theory explains well the temperature dependence of the microwave absorption and also allows to determine the vortex pinning force constant

    Equilibrium basal-plane magnetization of superconductive YNi(2)B(2)C - the influence of non-local electrodynamics

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    For a single crystal of YNi(2)B(2)C superconductor, the equilibrium magnetization M in the square basal plane has been studied experimentally as a function of temperature and magnetic field. While the magnetization M(H) deviates from conventional London predictions, a recent extension of London theory (to include effects of non-local electrodynamics) describes the experiments accurately. The resulting superconductive parameters are well behaved. These results are compared with corresponding findings for the case with M perpendicular to the basal plane.Comment: 7 pages, 5 Postscript Figures, 2 table
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