| Literature DB >> 18385735 |
Valerii M Vinokur1, Tatyana I Baturina, Mikhail V Fistul, Aleksey Yu Mironov, Mikhail R Baklanov, Christoph Strunk.
Abstract
Synchronized oscillators are ubiquitous in nature, and synchronization plays a key part in various classical and quantum phenomena. Several experiments have shown that in thin superconducting films, disorder enforces the droplet-like electronic texture--superconducting islands immersed into a normal matrix--and that tuning disorder drives the system from superconducting to insulating behaviour. In the vicinity of the transition, a distinct state forms: a Cooper-pair insulator, with thermally activated conductivity. It results from synchronization of the phase of the superconducting order parameter at the islands across the whole system. Here we show that at a certain finite temperature, a Cooper--air insulator undergoes a transition to a superinsulating state with infinite resistance. We present experimental evidence of this transition in titanium nitride films and show that the superinsulating state is dual to the superconducting state: it is destroyed by a sufficiently strong critical magnetic field, and breaks down at some critical voltage that is analogous to the critical current in superconductors.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18385735 DOI: 10.1038/nature06837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962