485 research outputs found
Superconductor transition temperatures study
Compounds having beta tungsten structure exist as solid solutions over composition range of several percent. However, for most of these compounds, relationship between composition and superconducting transition temperature is not known
Comment to the paper : Collapse of the vortex-lattice inductance and shear modulus at the melting transition in untwinned YBaCuO, by Matl \QTR{em}{et al.}
In a recent paper, Matl et al present a high-frequency study of the complex
resistivity of a pinned vortex lattice in YBaCuO . They focus on the
inductive-to-resistive transition which is investigated as a function of
temperature at a constant field T, so that the transition is associated
with the vanishing of vortex pinning strength. To our view, their conclusions
rely on a rather brittle experimental body and the collapse of C66 results from
an involved analysis of the finite frequency corrections to .
These corrections are not necessary since the complex frequency spectrum has
been previously interpreted by the two modes model, first proposed for low Tc
materials. We think that it is more adequate to interpret the present data and
should be at least considered.Comment: 4pages tex. submitted to PR
Depinning transition in type-II superconductors
The surface impedance Z(f) of conventional isotropic materials has been
carefully measured for frequencies f ranging from 1 kHz to 3 MHz, allowing a
detailed investigation of the depinning transition. Our results exhibit the
irrelevance of classical ideas to the dynamics of vortex pinning. We propose a
new picture, where the linear ac response is entirely governed by disordered
boundary conditions of a rough surface, whereas in the bulk vortices respond
freely. The universal law for Z(f) thus predicted is in remarkable agreement
with experiment, and tentatively applies to microwave data in YBaCuO films.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 14 reference
Surfactant effects in monodisperse magnetite nanoparticles of controlled size
Monodisperse magnetite Fe3O4 nanoparticles of controlled size within 6 and 20
nm in diameter were synthesized by thermal decomposition of an iron organic
precursor in an organic medium. Particles were coated with oleic acid. For all
samples studied, saturation magnetization Ms reaches the expected value for
bulk magnetite, in contrast to results in small particle systems for which Ms
is usually much smaller due to surface spin disorder. The coercive field for
the 6 nm particles is also similar to that of bulk magnetite. Both results
suggest that the oleic acid molecules covalently bonded to the nanoparticle
surface yield a strong reduction in the surface spin disorder. However,
although the saturated state may be similar, the approach to saturation is
different and, in particular, the high-field differential susceptibility is one
order of magnitude larger than in bulk materials. The relevance of these
results in biomedical applications is discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures. Presented at JEMS 2006 (San Sebastian, Spain).
Submitted to JMM
rf-studies of vortex dynamics in isotropic type-II superconductors
We have measured the surface impedance of thick superconductors in the mixed
state over a broad 2 kHz - 20 MHz frequency range. The depinning cross-over is
observed; but it is much broader than expected from classical theories of
pinning. A striking result is the existence of size effects which invalidate
the common interpretation of the low-frequency surface inductance in terms of a
single penetration depth. Instead, a two-mode description of vortex dynamics,
assuming free vortex flow in the bulk and surface pinning, accounts
quantitatively for the spectrum of the complex apparent penetration depth.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, 28 reference
Collapse of the vortex-lattice inductance and shear modulus at the melting transition in untwinned
The complex resistivity of the vortex lattice in an
untwinned crystal of 93-K has been measured at frequencies
from 100 kHz to 20 MHz in a 2-Tesla field ,
using a 4-probe RF transmission technique that enables continuous measurements
versus and temperature . As is increased, the inductance increases steeply to a cusp
at the melting temperature , and then undergoes a steep collapse
consistent with vanishing of the shear modulus . We discuss in detail
the separation of the vortex-lattice inductance from the `volume' inductance,
and other skin-depth effects. To analyze the spectra, we consider a weakly
disordered lattice with a low pin density. Close fits are obtained to
over 2 decades in . Values of the pinning parameter
and shear modulus obtained show that collapses by
over 4 decades at , whereas remains finite.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, Phys. Rev. B, in pres
Absence of Dipole Transitions in Vortices of Type II Superconductors
The response of a single vortex to a time dependent field is examined
microscopically and an equation of motion for vortex motion at non-zero
frequencies is derived. Of interest are frequencies near ,
where is the bulk energy gap and is the fermi energy. The low
temperature, clean, extreme type II limit and maintaining of equilibrium with
the lattice are assumed. A simplification occurs for large planar mass
anisotropy. Thus the results may be pertinent to materials such as and
high temperature superconductors. The expected dipole transition between core
states is hidden because of the self consistent nature of the vortex potential.
Instead the vortex itself moves and has a resonance at the frequency of the
transition.Comment: 12 pages, no figure
Microscopic theory of vortex dynamics in homogeneous superconductors
Vortex dynamics in fermionic superfluids is carefully considered from the
microscopic point of view. Finite temperatures, as well as impurities, are
explicitly incorporated. To enable readers understand the physical
implications, macroscopic demonstrations based on thermodynamics and
fluctuations- dissipation theorems are constructed. For the first time a clear
summary and a critical review of previous results are given.Comment: Presentations are made more straightforward. A detailed presentation
that why the vortex friction is finite when the geometric phase exists, as
required by referees, though I think it is obviou
Critical State Flux Penetration and Linear Microwave Vortex Response in YBa_2Cu_3O_{7-x} Films
The vortex contribution to the dc field (H) dependent microwave surface
impedance Z_s = R_s+iX_s of YBa_2Cu_3O_{7-x} thin films was measured using
suspended patterned resonators. Z_s(H) is shown to be a direct measure of the
flux density B(H) enabling a very precise test of models of flux penetration.
Three regimes of field-dependent behavior were observed: (1) Initial flux
penetration occurs on very low field scales H_i(4.2K) 100Oe, (2) At moderate
fields the flux penetration into the virgin state is in excellent agreement
with calculations based upon the field-induced Bean critical state for thin
film geometry, parametrized by a field scale H_s(4.2K) J_c*d 0.5T, (3) for very
high fields H >>H_s, the flux density is uniform and the measurements enable
direct determination of vortex parameters such as pinning force constants
\alpha_p and vortex viscosity \eta. However hysteresis loops are in
disagreement with the thin film Bean model, and instead are governed by the low
field scale H_i, rather than by H_s. Geometric barriers are insufficient to
account for the observed results.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX type, Uses REVTeX style files, Submitted to Physical
Review B, 600 dpi PostScript file with high resolution figures available at
http://sagar.physics.neu.edu/preprints.htm
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