74 research outputs found
Steps in the Negative-Differential-Conductivity Regime of a Superconductor
Current-voltage characteristics were measured in the mixed state of
Y1Ba2Cu3O(7-delta) superconducting films in the regime where flux flow becomes
unstable and the differential conductivity dj/dE becomes negative. Under
conditions where its negative slope is steep, the j(E) curve develops a
pronounced staircase like pattern. We attribute the steps in j(E) to the
formation of a dynamical phase consisting of the succesive nucleation of
quantized distortions in the local vortex velocity and flux distribution within
the moving flux matter.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Critical flux pinning and enhanced upper-critical-field in magnesium diboride films
We have conducted pulsed transport measurements on c-axis oriented magnesium
diboride films over the entire relevant ranges of magnetic field 0 \alt H \alt
H_{c2} (where \hcu is the upper critical field) and current density 0 \alt j
\alt j_{d} (where is the depairing current density). The intrinsic
disorder of the films combined with the large coherence length and
three-dimensionality, compared to cuprate superconductors, results in a
six-fold enhancement of and raises the depinning current density
to within an order of magnitude of . The current-voltage
response is highly non-linear at all fields, resulting from a combination of
depinning and pair-breaking, and has no trace of an Ohmic free-flux-flow
regime.
Keywords: pair, breaking, depairing, superconductor, superconductivity, flux,
fluxon, vortex, mgb
Energy Relaxation at a Hot-Electron Vortex Instability
At high dissipation levels, vortex motion in a superconducting film has been
observed to become unstable at a certain critical vortex velocity v*. At
substrate temperatures substantially below Tc, the observed behavior can be
accounted for by a model in which the electrons reach an elevated temperature
relative to the phonons and the substrate. Here we examine the underlying
assumptions concerning energy flow and relaxation times in this model. A
calculation of the rate of energy transfer from the electron gas to the lattice
finds that at the instability, the electronic temperature reaches a very high
value close to the critical temperature. Our calculated energy relaxation times
are consistent with those deduced from the experiments. We also estimate the
phonon mean free path and assess its effect on the flow of energy in the film.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Flux flow resistivity and vortex viscosity of high-Tc films
The flux flow regime of high-T samples of different normal state
resistivities is studied in the temperature range where the sign of the Hall
effect is reversed. The scaling of the vortex viscosity with normal state
resistivity is consistent with the Bardeen-Stephen theory. Estimates of the
influence of possible mechanisms suggested for the sign reversal of the Hall
effect are also given.Comment: 3 pages. 4 figures upon reques
Large Predicted Self-Field Critical Current Enhancements In Superconducting Strips Using Magnetic Screens
A transport current distribution over a wide superconducting sheet is shown
to strongly change in a presence of bulk magnetic screens of a soft magnet with
a high permeability. Depending on the geometry, the effect may drastically
suppress or protect the Meissner state of the sheet through the enhancement or
suppression of the edge barrier critical current. The total transport current
in the magnetically screened Meissner state is expected to compete with the
critical current of the flux-filled sheet only for samples whose critical
current is initially essentially controlled by the edge barrier effect.Comment: 6 figure
Vortex instability in molybdenum-germanium superconducting films
We studied the high driving force regime of the current-voltage transport
response in the mixed state of amorphous molybdenum-germanium superconducting
films to the point where the flux flow becomes unstable. The observed nonlinear
response conforms with the classic Larkin-Ovchinikov (LO) picture with a
quasiparticle-energy-relaxation rate dominated by the quasiparticle
recombination process. The measured energy relaxation rate was found to have a
magnitude and temperature dependence in agreement with theory.
PACS: 74.40.Gh, 74.25.Uv, 72.15.Lh, 73.50.Gr, 73.50.Fq
Keywords: fluxon, vortices, TDGL, FFF, negative differential conductivity,
NDC, non-monotonic IV curveComment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Hall Anomaly and Vortex-Lattice Melting in Superconducting Single Crystal YBa2Cu3O7-d
Sub-nanovolt resolution longitudinal and Hall voltages are measured in an
ultra pure YBa2Cu3O7-d single crystal. The Hall anomaly and the first-order
vortex-lattice melting transition are observed simultaneously. Changes in the
dynamic behavior of the vortex solid and liquid are correlated with features of
the Hall conductivity sxy. With the magnetic field oriented at an angle from
the twin-boundaries, the Hall conductivity sharply decreases toward large
negative values at the vortex-lattice melting transition.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures included, Postscript, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Flux flow of Abrikosov-Josephson vortices along grain boundaries in high-temperature superconductors
We show that low-angle grain boundaries (GB) in high-temperature
superconductors exhibit intermediate Abrikosov vortices with Josephson cores,
whose length along GB is smaller that the London penetration depth, but
larger than the coherence length. We found an exact solution for a periodic
vortex structure moving along GB in a magnetic field and calculated the
flux flow resistivity , and the nonlinear voltage-current
characteristics. The predicted dependence describes well our
experimental data on unirradiated and irradiated
bicrystals, from which the core size , and the intrinsic depairing
density on nanoscales of few GB dislocations were measured for the
first time. The observed temperature dependence of
indicates a significant order parameter suppression in current channels between
GB dislocation cores.Comment: 5 pages 5 figures. Phys. Rev. Lett. (accepted
Free flux flow resistivity in strongly overdoped high-T_c cuprate; purely viscous motion of the vortices in semiclassical d-wave superconductor
We report the free flux flow (FFF) resistivity associated with a purely
viscous motion of the vortices in moderately clean d-wave superconductor
Bi:2201 in the strongly overdoped regime (T_c=16K) for a wide range of the
magnetic field in the vortex state. The FFF resistivity is obtained by
measuring the microwave surface impedance at different microwave frequencies.
It is found that the FFF resistivity is remarkably different from that of
conventional s-wave superconductors. At low fields (H<0.2H_c2) the FFF
resistivity increases linearly with H with a coefficient which is far larger
than that found in conventional s-wave superconductors. At higher fields, the
FFF resistivity increases in proportion to \sqrt H up to H_c2. Based on these
results, the energy dissipation mechanism associated with the viscous vortex
motion in "semiclassical" d-wave superconductors with gap nodes is discussed.
Two possible scenarios are put forth for these field dependence; the
enhancement of the quasiparticle relaxation rate and the reduction of the
number of the quasiparticles participating the energy dissipation in d-wave
vortex state.Comment: 9 pages 7 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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