The surprisingly rapid relaxation of the sustainable current density in the
critical state of single crystalline Ba1−xKxFe2As2 is
investigated for magnetic fields oriented parallel to the c-axis and to the
ab--plane respectively. Due to the inadequacy of standard analysis procedures
developed for flux creep in the high temperature superconducting cuprates, we
develop a simple, straightforward data treatment technique that reveals the
creep mechanism and the creep exponent μ. At low magnetic fields, below the
second magnetization peak, μ varies only slightly as function of
temperature and magnetic flux density B. From the data, we determine the
temperature- and field dependence of the effective activation barrier for
creep. At low temperatures, the measured current density approaches the
zero--temperature critical current density (in the absence of creep) to within
a factor 2, thus lending credence to earlier conclusions drawn with respect to
the pinning mechanism. The comparable values of the experimental screening
current density and the zero-temperature critical current density reveals the
limited usefulness of the widely used "interpolation formula".Comment: Physical Review B (2012) Accepte