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Geometrical vortex lattice pinning and melting in YBaCuO submicron bridges.


ABSTRACT: Since the discovery of high-temperature superconductors (HTSs), most efforts of researchers have been focused on the fabrication of superconducting devices capable of immobilizing vortices, hence of operating at enhanced temperatures and magnetic fields. Recent findings that geometric restrictions may induce self-arresting hypervortices recovering the dissipation-free state at high fields and temperatures made superconducting strips a mainstream of superconductivity studies. Here we report on the geometrical melting of the vortex lattice in a wide YBCO submicron bridge preceded by magnetoresistance (MR) oscillations fingerprinting the underlying regular vortex structure. Combined magnetoresistance measurements and numerical simulations unambiguously relate the resistance oscillations to the penetration of vortex rows with intermediate geometrical pinning and uncover the details of geometrical melting. Our findings offer a reliable and reproducible pathway for controlling vortices in geometrically restricted nanodevices and introduce a novel technique of geometrical spectroscopy, inferring detailed information of the structure of the vortex system through a combined use of MR curves and large-scale simulations.

SUBMITTER: Papari GP 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5180090 | biostudies-other | 2016 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Geometrical vortex lattice pinning and melting in YBaCuO submicron bridges.

Papari G P GP   Glatz A A   Carillo F F   Stornaiuolo D D   Massarotti D D   Rouco V V   Longobardi L L   Beltram F F   Vinokur V M VM   Tafuri F F  

Scientific reports 20161223


Since the discovery of high-temperature superconductors (HTSs), most efforts of researchers have been focused on the fabrication of superconducting devices capable of immobilizing vortices, hence of operating at enhanced temperatures and magnetic fields. Recent findings that geometric restrictions may induce self-arresting hypervortices recovering the dissipation-free state at high fields and temperatures made superconducting strips a mainstream of superconductivity studies. Here we report on th  ...[more]

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