Peak effect in Superconductors - Experimental aspects G. Ravikumar Technical Physics & Prototype Engineering Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai
Type II superconductivity – Mixed state Abrikosov Vortex solid H c2 0 2.01 × G. cm 2 B = n 0 a 0 ( 0 /B) 1/2 H c1 100 Oe H c1 Meissner State B = 0 U el ( 0 /4 ) 2 ln (a 0 / ) (a 0 < ) ( 0 /4 ) 2 exp( a 0 / ) (a 0 > ) - M H
Lorentz Force F = J × B Causes vortex motion Electric field E = v X B Can not carry any bulk current Current transport through Abrikosov Vortex lattice
Vortex pinning by lattice defects and impurities U pin = 0 H c 2 3 V = 0 below I = I c (critical current) IcIc H / T Usually I c is a monotonically decreasing function of H / T
vortex lattice imaged by bitter decoration Conventional view: Unique solid vortex phase – disordered solid with various kinds of vortex lattice defects. Increase in material disorder leads to more defective vortex solid. Current view: Two distinct solid phases in weakly pinned superconductors Bragg Glass: Quasi-ordered (or weakly disordered) solid without lattice defects. Lattice correlations decay with distance as a power law. Vortex Glass: Highly disordered solid
Peak effect in NbSe 2 H c2 Measurement at different T Autler et al, PRL H T Peak effect Low T c materials
Neutron beam H X. S. Ling et al, PRL Small Angle Neutron Scattering (SANS) gives structure of the vortex lattice Below peak – Long range order exists Correlation volume V c is large Above peak – No long range order V c is small
Peak effect is seen only for weak pinning In V 3 Si defects introduced by fast neutron irradiation. At low dose pinning weak – peak is sharp Peak broadens with increasing dose (increase in pinning) For strong pinning J c – H is monotonic Küpfer et al
J c from Magnetization hysteresis measurements – Critical State Model Resistivity = 0 For J < J c, 0 For J > J c Persistent currents of density J c induced in response to field variation Direction of currents depends on the direction of field scan M (H ) = – 0 J c R M (H ) = 0 J c R J c (H) = { M (H ) – M (H ) } / 2 0 R
Peak effect in magnetization measurements J c (H) ~ M (H)/ 0 R MM NbSe2 T = 6.8K H c2
Pick-up coil in a SQUID magnetometer
Peak effect in LaSrCaCuO (T c 38 K) – Peak is broad – Anisotropic
Peak effect in YBCO (T c 90 K) Nishizaki et al PRB 58, Vortex lattice melting at high Temperatures in YBCO A sharp kink in vs T A sharp jump in reversible Magnetization It is established that vortex lattice melts through a first order transition
Phase diagram in YBCO (T c 90 K) kT is important in the peak effect regime in addition to U el and U pin Bragg Glass Bragg Glass – Vortex Liquid Transition is a First order transition Onset peak Plastically deformed vortex lattice
Peak effect in Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8 (Highly anisotropic) Melting – Peak occurs at very low fields – Peak field is almost constant – Peak effect line and melting line meet at a critical point Khaykovich et al, PRL 76 (1996) 2555
Over-doped : Weakest pinning Optimally doped : Strongest pinning Surprisingly Melting line follows the peak effect line
Not the Final Summary H T Peak effect in Low T c Sharp & Just below H c2 BSCCO YBCO
Nomenclature Peak effect (low Tc) Second Magnetization Peak (SMP) or just second peak (high T c ) Fishtail Effect Bragg Glass Phase (Dislocation free) Quasi-Ordered Vortex Solid Ordered Solid Phase Bragg Glass – Vortex Glass Transition Bragg Glass – Disordered Solid Transition Solid – Solid Transition Order – Disorder transition
History dependence in the peak region J c depends on how a particular point (H,T) in the phase diagram is approached ZFC FC HpHp Henderson et al PRL (1996) NbSe 2
Strong history dependence observed below H p Above H p, J c is unique T H FC ZFC HpHp J c FC (H,T) > J c ZFC (H,T)
History dependence in magnetization History dependence due to metastability
Metastability Repeated field cycling drives a metastable state towards equilibrium Minor Hysteresis Loops A large number of metastable states are possible Each metastable state can be macroscopically characterized by a J c
Just belowJust above No Metastability No History effect
Model to describe History dependent J c Each J c corresponds to a metastable vortex configuration Transformation from one configuration to another is governed by J c (B+ B) = J c (B) + | B | (J c st – J c )/B r G. Ravikumar et al, Phys. Rev. B, 61, 6479 (2000)
History dependence of the vortex state
G. Ravikumar et al, Phys. Rev. B 63, (2001) Equilibrium state by Repeated field cycling J c < J c eq J c > J c eq
G. Ravikumar et al, Phys. Rev. B 63, (2001) M eq shows “melting - like” change across the order-disorder transition
Avraham et al Nature 411 (2001) 451 Equilibration by transverse AC magnetic field H H ac Peak effect – First order transition
Magnetization measurements of spherical V 3 Si crystal Sample experiences B(t) = Const time + Oscillatory field due to sample vibration in non- uniform field
Order/disorder transition step in the reversible region of the BG step in m(B)step in m(B)
Summary History dependence and metastability near order-disorder transition. “Repeated field cycling” to access the equilibrium state Order-disorder transition is a first order transition.
History dependence Near Peak effect Many metastable states (multiple J c ’s) Disorder and low kT - difficult to access equilibrium state M eq (H) = [ M (H ) + M(H ) ]/2 Assuming J c (microscopic vortex state) is same in the increasing and decreasing field branches V 3 Si / 9.5 K