We report a significant enhancement of the upper critical field Hc2 of
different MgB2 samples alloyed with nonmagnetic impurities. By studying
films and bulk polycrystals with different resistivities ρ, we show a
clear trend of Hc2 increase as ρ increases. One particular high
resistivity film had zero-temperature Hc2(0) well above the Hc2
values of competing non-cuprate superconductors such as Nb3Sn and Nb-Ti. Our
high-field transport measurements give record values Hc2⊥(0)≈34T and Hc2∥(0)≈49T for high resistivity films and
Hc2(0)≈29T for untextured bulk polycrystals. The highest Hc2
film also exhibits a significant upward curvature of Hc2(T), and
temperature dependence of the anisotropy parameter γ(T)=Hc2∥/Hc2⊥ opposite to that of single crystals: γ(T) decreases as the
temperature decreases, from γ(Tc)≈2 to γ(0)≈1.5.
This remarkable Hc2 enhancement and its anomalous temperature dependence
are a consequence of the two-gap superconductivity in MgB2, which offers
special opportunities for further Hc2 increase by tuning of the impurity
scattering by selective alloying on Mg and B sites. Our experimental results
can be explained by a theory of two-gap superconductivity in the dirty limit.
The very high values of Hc2(T) observed suggest that MgB2 can be made
into a versatile, competitive high-field superconductor.Comment: An updated version of the paper (12/12/2002)that was placed on
cond-mat on May 7 200