3 research outputs found
Driven vortices in confined geometry: the Corbino disk
The fabrication of artificial pinning structures allows a new generation of
experiments which can probe the properties of vortex arrays by forcing them to
flow in confined geometries. We discuss the theoretical analysis of such
experiments in both flux liquids and flux solids, focusing on the Corbino disk
geometry. In the liquid, these experiments can probe the critical behavior near
a continuous liquid-glass transition. In the solid, they probe directly the
onset of plasticity.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Invited talk presented at M2S-HTSC-VI, Houston,
February 200
A hydrodynamic approach to the Bose-Glass transition
Nonlinear hydrodynamics is used to evaluate disorder-induced corrections to
the vortex liquid tilt modulus for finite screening length and arbitrary
disorder geometry. Explicit results for aligned columnar defects yield a
criterion for locating the Bose glass transition line at all fields.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Contributed talk at the First ESF-Vortex Matter
Conference in Agia Pelagia, Crete, September 199
Vortex Physics in Confined Geometries
Patterned irradiation of cuprate superconductors with columnar defects allows
a new generation of experiments which can probe the properties of vortex
liquids by forcing them to flow in confined geometries. Such experiments can be
used to distinguish experimentally between continuous disorder-driven glass
transitions of vortex matter, such as the vortex glass or the Bose glass
transition, and nonequilibrium polymer-like glass transitions driven by
interaction and entanglement. For continuous glass transitions, an analysis of
such experiments that combines an inhomogeneous scaling theory with the
hydrodynamic description of viscous flow of vortex liquids can be used to infer
the critical behavior. After generalizing vortex hydrodynamics to incorporate
currents and field gradients both longitudinal and transverse to the applied
field, the critical exponents for all six vortex liquid viscosities are
obtained. In particular, the shear viscosity is predicted to diverge as
at the Bose glass transition, with and
the dynamical critical exponent. The scaling behavior of the ac
resistivity is also derived. As concrete examples of flux flow in confined
geometries, flow in a channel and in the Corbino disk geometry are discussed in
detail. Finally, the implications of scaling for the hydrodynamic description
of transport in the dc flux transformer geometry are discussed.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Physica