646 research outputs found
Anisotropic response of the moving vortex lattice in superconducting MoGe amorphous films
We have performed magnetic susceptibility measurements in MoGe
amorphous thin films biased with an electrical current using anisotropic coils.
We tested the symmetry of the vortex response changing the relative orientation
between the bias current and the susceptibility coils. We found a region in the
DC current - temperature phase diagram where the dynamical vortex structures
behave anisotropically. In this region the shielding capability of the
superconducting currents measured by the susceptibility coils is less effective
along the direction of vortex motion compared to the transverse direction. This
anisotropic response is found in the same region where the peak effect in the
critical current is developed. On rising temperature the isotropic behavior is
recovered.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Measurement of mesoscopic High- superconductors using Si mechanical micro-oscillators
In a superconducting mesoscopic sample, with dimensions comparable to the
London penetration depth, some properties are qualitatively different to those
found in the bulk material. These properties include magnetization, vortex
dynamics and ordering of the vortex lattice. In order to detect the small
signals produced by this kind of samples, new instruments designed for the
microscale are needed. In this work we use micromechanical oscillators to study
the magnetic properties of a BiSrCaCuO disk with a
diameter of 13.5 microns and a thickness of 2.5 microns. The discussion of our
results is based on the existence and contribution of inter and intra layer
currents.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Latent-heat and non-linear vortex liquid at the vicinity of the first-order phase transition in layered high-Tc superconductors
In this work we revisit the vortex matter phase diagram in layered
superconductors solving still open questions by means of AC and DC local
magnetic measurements in the paradigmatic BiSrCaCuO
compound. We show that measuring with AC magnetic techniques is mandatory in
order to probe the bulk response of vortex matter, particularly at
high-temperatures where surface barriers for vortex entrance dominate. From the
-evolution of the enthalpy and latent-heat at the transition we
find that, contrary to previous reports, the nature of the dominant interlayer
coupling is electromagnetic in the whole temperature range. By studying the
dynamic properties of the phase located at , we reveal
the spanning in a considerable fraction of the phase diagram of a non-linear
vortex phase suggesting bulk pinning might play a role even in the liquid
vortex phase.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1212.456
Dissipation in Mesoscopic Superconductors with Ac Magnetic Fields
The response of mesoscopic superconductors to an ac magnetic field is
investigated both experimentally and with numerical simulations. We study small
square samples with dimensions of the order of the penetration depth. We obtain
the ac susceptibitity at microwave frequencies as a
function of the dc magnetic field . We find that the dissipation, given
by , has a non monotonous behavior in mesoscopic samples. In the
numerical simulations we obtain that the dissipation increases before the
penetration of vortices and then it decreases abruptly after vortices have
entered the sample. This is verified experimentally, where we find that
has strong oscillations as a function of in small squares of
Pb.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Vortex matter freezing in BiSrCaCuO samples with a very dense distribution of columnar defects
We show that the dynamical freezing of vortex structures nucleated at diluted
densities in BiSrCaCuO samples with a dense
distribution of columnar defects, with
\,kG, results in configurations with liquid-like correlations. We
propose a freezing model considering a relaxation dynamics dominated by
double-kink excitations driven by the local stresses obtained directly from
experimental images. With this model we estimate the relaxation barrier and the
freezing temperature. We argue that the low-field frozen vortex structures
nucleated in a dense distribution of columnar defects thus correspond to an
out-of-equilibrium non-entangled liquid with strongly reduced mobility rather
than to a snapshot of a metastable state with divergent activation barriers as
for instance expected for the Bose-glass phase at equilibrium.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
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