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Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration with Vitali Yurchenko, Alexander Bobyl, Yuri Galperin, Tom Johansen Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway Eun-Mi Choi, Sung-Ik Lee Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea

Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

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Page 1: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors

Daniel ShantsevPhysics Department, University of Oslo, Norway

in collaboration with

Vitali Yurchenko, Alexander Bobyl, Yuri Galperin, Tom Johansen

Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway

Eun-Mi Choi, Sung-Ik Lee

Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea

Page 2: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

What determines the maximal current

a superconductor can carry?

Page 3: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

R

II

Magnetic field created by current,

should not exceed the critical magnetic field

H = I / 2 R < Hc

H

1. Solsby Rule

Jc(1) = 2Hc / R

Page 4: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

2. Depairing current density

R

II

Ginsburg-Landau equations

have a solution only if

J < Jc(2) Hc /

For J>Jc the kinetic energy of Cooper pairs exceeds

the superconducting energy gap

Page 5: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Vortex lattice

Meissner effect

B dA = h/2e = 0 Flux

quantum:

Å

J

B(r)

normal core

Page 6: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

current

Lorentz forceF = j

Vortices are driven by Lorentz force andtheir motion creates electric field E ~ dB/dt

Ba

J

pinningforce

Lorentzforce

Vortices get pinned by tiny defects and start moving only if

Lorentz force > Pinning force

Page 7: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

U(r)

3. Depinning current density

J < Jc(3) = U / 0

Superconductor remains in the non-resistive state only if

Lorentz force < Pinning force, i.e. if

Ideal pinning center is

a non-SC column of radius ~ so that U ~ Hc

22 and

similar to the depairing Jc

Jc(3) ~ Hc /

Page 8: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

current

velocity

E ~ dB/dt Vortex motiondissipates energy,

J*E

Local TemperatureIncreases

+kT

It is easier for vortices to overcome pinning barriers

Vortices movefaster

positivefeedback

Page 9: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Thermal instability criterion

~ Swartz &Bean, JAP 1968

H

0 x

j

QM > QT - instability starts

QT = C(T) T

QM = Jc(T) JcdJc/dT

H > Hfj = (2C Jc [dJc/dT]-1)1/2

Jc(4) = (2C Jc

(3) [d Jc(3) /dT]-1)1/2/2w

Hfj Hfjslab (d/w)1/2

x

Hj

2w

d<<w

D. S. et al. PRB 2005

Page 10: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

List of current-limiting mechanisms

1. Solsby, Jc ~ Hc/R2. Depairing current Jc ~ Hc / 3. Depinning current, Jc (U)4. Thermal instability current, Jc(C,..)

Jc(3) < Jc

(4) < Jc(1) < Jc

(2)

We need to know which Jc is the most important i.e. the smallest!

Achieved

Page 11: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

How to distinguish between Jc’s

J >Jc(3) a small finite resistance appears

J >Jc(4) a catastrophic flux jump occurs

(T rises to ~Tc or higher)

Brull et al, Annalen der Physik 1992, v.1, p.243Gaevski et al, APL 1997

Page 12: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Global flux jumps

Muller & Andrikidis, PRB-94

M(H) loop

M ~ M Critical state is destroyed

Page 13: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Dendritic flux jumps

Zhao et al, PRB 2002

M ~ 0.01 M Critical state is destroyed locally

Europhys. Lett. 59, 599-605 (2002)

Magneto-optical imaging

MgB2 film

Page 14: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Microscopic flux jumps

5 mm

MgB2 film

100 m

MgB2 filmfabricated byS.I. Lee (Pohang, Korea)

Magneto-optical movie showsthat flux penetration proceeds

via small jumps

Page 15: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Analyzing difference images

7.15 mT

7.40 mT

linearrampof Ba

15 MO images

T=3.6K

= MO image (7.165mT) — MO image (7.150mT)

local increase of flux density -

flux jump

23000

11000

2500

Page 16: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

-100 0 100 2000

10

20

30

40

50 before jump after jump

Ba=5.6mTFlu

x de

nsity

B (

mT

)

distance (m)

Ba=11.6mT

edge

x

edge

31,0000

7,5000

Too small, M ~ 10-5 M : invisible in M(H) Critical state is not destroyed B-distribution looks as usual

The problem with microscopic jumps

Flux profiles before and after a flux jump have similar shapes

From the standard measurementsone can not tell what limits Jc:

vortex pinning OR thermal instabilities

Jc(3) OR Jc

(4) ?

Page 17: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

What can be done

One should measure dynamics of flux penetration and look for jumps If any, compare their statistics, B-profiles etc with thermal instability theories

If they fit, then Jc=Jc(4) , determined by instability;

actions – improve C, heat removal conditions etc, if not, then Jc=Jc

(3), determined by pinning;

actions – create better pinning centers

-1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.00.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

Ba = 2Bc

Ba = Bc

before jump after jump

B / 0

j cd

x / w

-100 0 100 2000

10

20

30

40

50 before jump after jump

Ba=5.6mTFlu

x d

en

sity

B (

mT

)

distance (m)

Ba=11.6mT

edge

Jump size (0)

Nu

mb

er

of

jum

ps

power-law

peak(thermalmechanism)

Altshuler et al. PRB 2005

Page 18: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

300 m70 m

Two Jc’s in one sample

Jcleft 2 Jc

right

Jc(3) Jc

(4)

Page 19: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Dendritic instability can be suppressed by a contact with normal metal

Baziljevich et al 2002

Page 20: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Au suppresses jumps,Jc is determined by pinning

300 m70 m

Two Jc’s in one sample

Jc(3) Jc

(4)

3 m

m

9 mm

w

Au

MgB2

Jc is determined by jumps

Page 21: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

H

J

A graphical way to determine Jc’s: d-lines

Page 22: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

3 mm

Au

MgB2

Jc1

Jc2?

Page 23: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

αα

Page 24: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

ααβ

11

1

cjd

22

1

cjd

1cos22cos2coscos 2

1

2

2

1 c

c

j

j

d

d

1

2

1

2

12

1arccos

12

1arccos

c

c

c

c

j

j

j

j

α ≈ π/3

! jc1 ≈ 2jc2 !

Page 25: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Thermal avalanches can be truly microscopic as observed by MOI and described by a proposed adiabatic model

These avalanches can not be detected either in M(H) loops or in static MO images =>

“What determines Jc?” - is an open question

MO images of MgB2 films partly covered with Au show two distinct Jc’s: - Jc determined by stability with respect to thermal avalanches - a higher Jc determined by pinning

http://www.fys.uio.no/super/

Conclusions

Page 26: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration
Page 27: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

6.8 7.2 7.6 8.0 8.4

0

10

20

30

loc

al

B (

mT

)

Ba (mT)

local flux density calculated from local intensity of MO image;each point on the curve corresponds to one MO image

5x5 m2

linear ramp 6 T/s

Evolution of local flux density

7mT7.4mT

7.9mT

Local B grows bysmall and repeated steps

Page 28: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Jc is determined by

stability with respect to thermal avalanches

But we need to prove that the observed microscopic avalanches are indeed of thermal origin

Jc depends on

thermal coupling to environment, specific heat, sample dimensions

Page 29: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Adiabatic :All energy released by flux motion is absorbed

Flux that has passed through “x” during avalanche

Biot-Savart for thin film

Adiabatic critical state for a thin strip

Critical state

In the spirit of Swartz &Bean in 1968

Page 30: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

We fit• Bfj ~ 2 mT• Tth ~ 13 K• (Ba) dependence

using only one parameter:

4 8 12 16 20

102

103

104

105

106

Ba (mT)

Flux

jum

p si

ze (

0) T=0.1Tc

0.3Tc

Thermal originof avalanches

Flux jump size

Page 31: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

Ba = 13.6 mT

the flux pattern almost repeats itself

Irreproducibility

B(r)

B(r) is irreproducible!

The final pattern is the same but

the sequences of avalanches are different

MOI(8.7mT) - MOI(8.5mT)

B(r)

T=3.6K

Page 32: Critical state controlled by microscopic flux jumps in superconductors Daniel Shantsev Physics Department, University of Oslo, Norway in collaboration

polarizer P

A

mirrorMO indicator

image

largesmall

Faraday rotation

small

SN

light source

Linearlypolarized light

Faraday-active crystal

Magnetic fieldH

(H)F

Magneto-optical Imaging

Square YBaCuO film