112 research outputs found
Theoretical analysis of drag resistance in amorphous thin films exhibiting superconductor-insulator transitions
The magnetical field tuned superconductor-insulator transition in amorphous thin films, e.g., Ta and InO,
exhibits a range of yet unexplained curious phenomena, such as a putative low-resistance metallic phase
intervening the superconducting and the insulating phase, and a huge peak in the magnetoresistance at large
magnetic field. Qualitatively, the phenomena can be explained equally well within several significantly different
pictures, particularly the condensation of quantum vortex liquid, and the percolation of superconducting
islands embedded in normal region. Recently, we proposed and analyzed a distinct measurement in Y. Zou,
G. Refael, and J. Yoon, Phys. Rev. B 80, 180503 (2009) that should be able to decisively point to the correct
picture: a drag resistance measurement in an amorphous thin-film bilayer setup. Neglecting interlayer tunneling,
we found that the drag resistance within the vortex paradigm has opposite sign and is orders of magnitude
larger than that in competing paradigms. For example, two identical films as in G. Sambandamurthy, L. W.
Engel, A. Johansson, and D. Shahar, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 107005 _2004_ with 25 nm layer separation at
0.07 K would produce a drag resistance ~10^(−4) Ω according the vortex theory but only ~10^(−12) Ω for the
percolation theory. We provide details of our theoretical analysis of the drag resistance within both paradigms
and report some results as well
Investigating superconductor-insulator transition in thin films using drag resistance:Theoretical analysis of a proposed experiment
The magnetically driven superconductor-insulator transition in amorphous thin
films (e.g., InO, Ta) exhibits several mysterious phenomena, such as a putative
metallic phase and a huge magnetoresistance peak. Unfortunately, several
conflicting categories of theories, particularly quantum-vortex condensation,
and normal region percolation, explain key observations equally well. We
propose a new experimental setup, an amorphous thin-film bilayer, where a drag
resistance measurement would clarify the role quantum vortices play in the
transition, and hence decisively point to the correct picture. We provide a
thorough analysis of the device, which shows that the vortex paradigm gives
rise to a drag with an opposite sign and orders of magnitude larger than the
drag measured if competing paradigms apply.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Magnetically Induced Metallic Phase in Superconducting Tantalum Films
We have studied the electronic transport properties of homogeneously
disordered superconducting tantalum thin films in magnetic fields. The films
exhibit three distinct transport regimes in the zero temperature limit which we
identify as superconducting, metallic, and insulating phases. The metallic
phase is unexpected. The transport characteristics of this metallic phase are
found to be similar to those of MoGe films and high mobility dilute
two-dimensional electrons or holes confined in semiconductor interface or
transistor geometry.Comment: four pages, four figure
A Study on the Role of Information Systems in Organizational Growth: A Longitudinal Case Study
The purpose of this paper is to present an integrated framework which can explain how the role of information systems evolves in organizations. To develop the framework, two critical dimensions, each of which is classified further into three categories, are selected to explain the role of information systems in organizational growth: the purpose of information processing, the scope of information processing. As these are considered to be major dimensions underpinning much research regarding the role of information systems in organizations, the framework proposed in this paper could serve to integrate much existing research, while stimulating future research aimed at verifying its applicability
Non-thermal origin of nonlinear transport across magnetically induced superconductor-metal-insulator transition
We have studied the effect of perpendicular magnetic fields and temperatures
on the nonlinear electronic transport in amorphous Ta superconducting thin
films. The films exhibit a magnetic field induced metallic behavior intervening
the superconductor-insulator transition in the zero temperature limit. We show
that the nonlinear transport in the superconducting and metallic phase is of
non-thermal origin and accompanies an extraordinarily long voltage response
time.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Evidence of spatial inhomogeneity near the onset of magnetically induced insulating state in superconducting thin films
Non-monotonic differential resistance (dV/dI) is observed in magnetically
induced insulating films which exhibit apparent superconductor-metal-insulator
transitions in the low temperature limit; at low bias currents the nonlinear
transport is insulator-like while at high bias currents it is characteristic of
metallic phase. The non-monotonic dV/dI may be evidence that the insulating
state consists of metallic domains connected by point contacts (insulating
gaps), implying that spatial inhomogeneities play a dominant role in
determining the nature of the apparent metal-insulator transition.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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