Strong pinning theory of thermal vortex creep in type-II superconductors | |
Article | |
关键词: CHARGE-DENSITY WAVES; FLUX-CREEP; VORTICES; DYNAMICS; BEHAVIOR; LATTICE; MOTION; FIELD; | |
DOI : 10.1103/PhysRevB.100.014501 | |
来源: SCIE |
【 摘 要 】
We study thermal effects on pinning and creep in type-II superconductors where vortices interact with a low density n(p) of strong pointlike defects with pinning energy e(p) and extension xi, the vortex core size. Defects are classified as strong if the interaction between a single pin and an individual vortex leads to the appearance of bistable solutions describing pinned and free vortex configurations. Extending the strong pinning theory to account for thermal fluctuations, we provide a quantitative analysis of vortex depinning and creep. We determine the thermally activated transitions between bistable states using Kramers rate theory and find the nonequilibrium steady-state occupation of vortex states. The latter depends on the temperature T and vortex velocity v and determines the current-voltage (or force-velocity) characteristic of the superconductor at finite temperatures. We find that the T = 0 linear excess-current characteristic v proportional to (j - j(c)) Theta (j - j(c)), with its sharp transition at the critical current density j(c), keeps its overall shape but is modified in three ways due to thermal creep: a downward renormalization of j(c) to the thermal depinning current density j(dp) (T) < j(c), a smooth rounding of the characteristic around j(dp) (T), and the appearance of thermally assisted flux flow v proportional to j exp(-U-0/k(B)T) at small drive j << j(c), with the activation barrier U-0 defined through the energy landscape at the intersection of free and pinned branches. This characteristic emphasizes the persistence of pinning of creep at current densities beyond critical.
【 授权许可】
Free