585 research outputs found
Vortex-glass transition in superconducting Nb/Cu superlattices
Nb/Cu superconducting superlattices have been fabricated by dc magnetron
sputtering. This system shows a vortex glass transition with critical exponents
similar to high temperatures superconductors exponents. The transition
dymensionality is governed by the superconducting coupling regime. The vortex
glass transition shows a pure two dimensional behavior in decoupled
superlattices and a quasi-two dimensional behavior in the superlattice coupling
regime.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Control of dissipation in superconducting films by magnetic stray fields
Hybrid superconducting/magnetic nanostructures on Si substrates have been
built with identical physical dimensions but different magnetic configurations.
By constructing arrays based on Co-dots with in-plane, out-of-plane, and vortex
state magnetic configurations, the stray fields are systematically tuned.
Dissipation in the mixed state of superconductors can be decreased (increased)
by several orders of magnitude by decreasing (increasing) the stray magnetic
fields. Furthermore, ordering of the stray fields over the entire array helps
to suppress dissipation and enhance commensurability effects increasing the
number of dissipation minima.Comment: 16 pages including 4 figures; accepted in Applied Physics Letter
Effective penetration length and interstitial vortex pinning in superconducting films with regular arrays of defects
In order to compare magnetic and non-magnetic pinning we have nanostructured
two superconducting films with regular arrays of pinning centers: Cu
(non-magnetic) dots in one case, and Py (magnetic) dots in the other. For low
applied magnetic fields, when all the vortices are pinned in the artificial
inclusions, magnetic dots prove to be better pinning centers, as has been
generally accepted. Unexpectedly, when the magnetic field is increased and
interstitial vortices appear, the results are very different: we show how the
stray field generated by the magnetic dots can produce an effective reduction
of the penetration length. This results in strong consequences in the transport
properties, which, depending on the dot separation, can lead to an enhancement
or worsening of the transport characteristics. Therefore, the election of the
magnetic or non-magnetic character of the pinning sites for an effective
reduction of dissipation will depend on the range of the applied magnetic
field.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Superconducting/magnetic three state nanodevice for memory and reading applications
We present a simple nanodevice that can operate in two modes: i) three-state
memory and ii) reading device. The nanodevice is fabricated with an array of
ordered triangular-shaped nanomagnets embedded in a superconducting thin film.
The input signal is ac current and the output signal is dc voltage. Vortex
ratchet effect in combination with out of plane magnetic anisotropy of the
nanomagnets is the background physics which governs the nanodevice performance.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Double percolation effects and fractal behavior in magnetic/superconducting hybrids
Perpendicular magnetic anisotropy ferromagnetic/ superconducting (FM/SC)
bilayers with a labyrinth domain structure are used to study nucleation of
superconductivity on a fractal network, tunable through magnetic history. As
clusters of reversed domains appear in the FM layer, the SC film shows a
percolative behavior that depends on two independent processes: the arrangement
of initial reversed domains and the fractal geometry of expanding clusters. For
a full labyrinth structure, the behavior of the upper critical field is typical
of confined superconductivity on a fractal network.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Vortex ratchet reversal: The role of interstitial vortices
Triangular arrays of Ni nanotriangles embedded in superconducting Nb films
exhibit unexpected dynamical vortex effects. Collective pinning with a vortex
lattice configuration different from the expected fundamental triangular
"Abrikosov state" is found. The vortex motion which prevails against the
triangular periodic potential is produced by channelling effects between
triangles. Interstitial vortices coexisting with pinned vortices in this
asymmetric potential, lead to ratchet reversal, i.e. a DC output voltage which
changes sign with the amplitude of an applied alternating drive current. In
this landscape, ratchet reversal is always observed at all magnetic fields (all
numbers of vortices) and at different temperatures. The ratchet reversal is
unambiguously connected to the presence of two locations for the vortices:
interstitial and above the artificial pinning sites.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, 1 Tabl
On the relationship between pump chirp and single-photon chirp in spontaneous parametric downconversion
We study the chronocyclic character, i.e. the joint temporal and spectral
properties, of the single-photon constituents of photon pairs generated by
spontaneous parametric down conversion. In particular we study how single
photon properties, including purity and single-photon chirp, depend on photon
pair properties, including the type of signal-idler spectral and correlations
and the level of pump chirp.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Experimental ratchet effect in superconducting films with periodic arrays of asymmetric potentials
A vortex lattice ratchet effect has been investigated in Nb films grown on
arrays of nanometric Ni triangles, which induce periodic asymmetric pinning
potentials. The vortex lattice motion yields a net dc-voltage when an ac
driving current is applied to the sample and the vortex lattice moves through
the field of asymmetric potentials. This ratchet effect is studied taking into
account the array geometry, the temperature, the number of vortices per unit
cell of the array and the applied ac currents.Comment: 15 pages, figures include
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