220 research outputs found
Suppression of \bbox{T_c} in superconducting amorphous wires
The suppression of the mean field temperature of the superconducting
transition, , in homogeneous amorphous wires is studied. We develop a
theory that gives in situations when the dynamically enhanced Coulomb
repulsion competes with the contact attraction. The theory accurately describes
recent experiments on --suppression in superconducting wires, after a
procedure that minimizes the role of nonuniversal mechanisms influencing
is applied.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, 3 figure
The unusual thickness dependence of superconductivity in -MoGe thin films
Thin films of -MoGe show progressively reduced 's as the
thickness is decreased below 30 nm and the sheet resistance exceeds 100
. We have performed far-infrared transmission and reflection
measurements for a set of -MoGe films to characterize this weakened
superconducting state. Our results show the presence of an energy gap with
ratio in all films studied, slightly higher
than the BCS value, even though the transition temperatures decrease
significantly as film thickness is reduced. The material properties follow
BCS-Eliashberg theory with a large residual scattering rate except that the
coherence peak seen in the optical scattering rate is found to be strongly
smeared out in the thinner superconducting samples. A peak in the optical mass
renormalization at is predicted and observed for the first time
Effect of thermal phase fluctuations on the superfluid density of two-dimensional superconducting films
High precision measurements of the complex sheet conductivity of
superconducting Mo77Ge23 thin films have been made from 0.4 K through Tc. A
sharp drop in the inverse sheet inductance, 1/L(T), is observed at a
temperature, Tc, which lies below the mean-field transition temperature, Tco.
Just below Tc, the suppression of 1/L(T) below its mean-field value indicates
that longitudinal phase fluctuations have nearly their full classical
amplitude, but they disappear rapidly as T decreases. We argue that there is a
quantum crossover at about 0.94 Tco, below which classical phase fluctuations
are suppressed.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures. Subm. to PR
Weak Localization Effect in Superconductors
We study the effect of weak localization on the transition temperatures of
superconductors using time-reversed scattered state pairs, and find that the
weak localization effect weakens electron-phonon interactions. With solving the
BCS equation, the calculated values for are in good agreement
with experimental data for various two- and three-dimensional disordered
superconductors. We also find that the critical sheet resistance for the
suppression of superconductivity in thin films does not satisfy the universal
behavior but depends on sample, in good agreement with experiments. but depends
on sample, in good agreement with experiments.Comment: 14 pages, Revtex, 5 ps figure
Dynamic Impedance of Two-Dimensional Superconducting Films Near the Superconducting Transition
The sheet impedances, Z(w,T), of several superconducting a-Mo77Ge23 films and
one In/InOx film have been measured in zero field using a two-coil mutual
inductance technique at frequencies from 100 Hz to 100 kHz. Z(w,T) is found to
have three contributions: the inductive superfluid, renormalized by nonvortex
phase fluctuations; conventional vortex-antivortex pairs, whose contribution
turns on very rapidly just below the usual Kosterlitz-Thouless-Berezinskii
unbinding temperature; and an anomalous contribution. The latter is
predominantly resistive, persists well below the KTB temperature, and is weakly
dependent on frequency down to remarkably low frequencies, at least 100 Hz. It
increases with T as e-U'(T)/kT, where the activation energy, U'(T), is about
half the energy to create a vortex-antivortex pair, indicating that the
frequency dependence is that of individual excitations, rather than critical
behavior.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figs; subm PR
Superconductor-Insulator Transition in a Capacitively Coupled Dissipative Environment
We present results on disordered amorphous films which are expected to
undergo a field-tuned Superconductor-Insulator Transition.The addition of a
parallel ground plane in proximity to the film changes the character of the
transition.Although the screening effects expected from "dirty-boson" theories
are not evident,there is evidence that the ground plane couples a certain type
of dissipation into the system,causing a dissipation-induced phase
transition.The dissipation due to the phase transition couples similarly into
quantum phase transition systems such as superconductor-insulator transitions
and Josephson junction arrays.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The Upper Critical Field in Disordered Two-Dimensional Superconductors
We present calculations of the upper critical field in superconducting films
as a function of increasing disorder (as measured by the normal state
resistance per square). In contradiction to previous work, we find that there
is no anomalous low-temperature positive curvature in the upper critical field
as disorder is increased. We show that the previous prediction of this effect
is due to an unjustified analytical approximation of sums occuring in the
perturbative calculation. Our treatment includes both a careful analysis of
first-order perturbation theory, and a non-perturbative resummation technique.
No anomalous curvature is found in either case. We present our results in
graphical form.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
True Superconductivity in a 2D "Superconducting-Insulating" System
We present results on disordered amorphous films which are expected to
undergo a field-tuned Superconductor-Insulator Transition. Based on low-field
data and I-V characteristics, we find evidence of a low temperature
Metal-to-Superconductor transition. This transition is characterized by
hysteretic magnetoresistance and discontinuities in the I-V curves. The
metallic phase just above the transition is different from the "Fermi Metal"
before superconductivity sets in.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Infrared Studies of the Onset of Conductivity in Ultra-Thin Pb Films
In this paper we report the first experimental measurement of the infrared
conductivity of ultra-thin quenched-condensed Pb films. For dc sheet
resistances such that the ac conductance increases with
frequency but is in disagreement with the predictions of weak localization. We
attribute this behavior to the effects of an inhomogeneous granular structure
of these films, which is manifested at the very small probing scale of infrared
measurements. Our data are consistent with predictions of two-dimensional
percolation theory.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letter
Vortex dynamics and upper critical fields in ultrathin Bi films
Current-voltage (I-V) characteristics of quench condensed, superconducting,
ultrathin films in a magnetic field are reported. These I-V's show
hysteresis for all films, grown both with and without thin underlayers.
Films on Ge underlayers, close to superconductor-insulator transition (SIT),
show a peak in the critical current, indicating a structural transformation of
the vortex solid (VS). These underlayers, used to make the films more
homogeneous, are found to be more effective in pinning the vortices. The upper
critical fields (B) of these films are determined from the resistive
transitions in perpendicular magnetic field. The temperature dependence of the
upper critical field is found to differ significantly from Ginzburg-Landau
theory, after modifications for disorder.Comment: Phys Rev B, to be published Figure 6 replaced with correct figur
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