| Literature DB >> 30842502 |
S Blanco Alvarez1, J Brisbois1, S Melinte2, R B G Kramer3, A V Silhanek4.
Abstract
Superconductors are well known for their ability to screen out magnetic fields. In type-II superconductors, as the magnetic field pressure is progressively increased, magnetic flux accumulates at the periphery of the sample, very much like charges accumulate in a capacitor when voltage is increased. As for capacitors, exceeding certain threshold field causes the blocked magnetic flux to abruptly penetrate into the sample. This phenomenon, triggered by a thermomagnetic instability, is somewhat analogous to the dielectric breakdown of the capacitor and leaves behind a similar Lichtenberg imprinting. Even though electrical breakdown threshold has been extensively studied in dielectrics, little information is known about the statistical distribution of the thermomagnetic breakdown in superconductors. In this work, we address this problem by performing magneto-optical imaging experiments on a Nb film where nanometric heating elements are used to rapidly erase the magnetic history of the sample. We demonstrate that the size and shape distributions of avalanches permits to unambiguously identify the transition between two regimes where either thermal diffusivity or magnetic diffusivity dominates. Clear criteria for discriminating athermal dynamic avalanches from thermally driven avalanches are introduced. This allows us to provide the first precise determination of the threshold field of the thermomagnetic breakdown and unveil the details of the transition from finger-like magnetic burst to dendritic branching morphology. These findings open a new avenue in the interdisciplinary exploration of catastrophic avalanches through non destructive repeatable experiments.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30842502 PMCID: PMC6403392 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-39337-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Sample layout and local thermometry configuration. Scanning electron microscopy details of the investigated sample. (a) Layout of the rectangular Nb film with four thermal elements symmetrically placed along the long sides. (b) Zoom-in on one of the as-fabricated Nb thermal elements, highlighting the central bridge. (c) Most of the voltage drop takes place in the short Nb bridge made non-superconducting via electroannealing, corresponding to the dashed yellow rectangle in panel (b). The inset in panel (d) shows the configuration used for tracking the temperature of the substrate with one thermal element used as nanothermometer, while exciting the diagonally opposed nanoheater with a 7 mA current during 5 s. The blue continuous line in panel (d) shows the time evolution of the sample temperature detected by the nanothermometer (left axis) and the red dots correspond to the temperature change detected in the cold finger thermometer (right axis). MO measurements start with a magnetic field sweep once the temperature of the substrate has been stabilized, as indicated by the black arrow.
Figure 2Statistical analysis of magnetic flux avalanches. (a) Differential MO image of the Nb film at T = 3.83 K. White-blue (red) regions correspond to positive (negative) field variations, while dark regions correspond to undetectable field variations. (b) Distribution of the avalanche sizes obtained from 79726 recorded events during 813 field sweeps from 14 Oe to 25 Oe. The graded color in the histogram indicates the mean field value at which the avalanches occur, from H = 17.75 Oe (orange) to H = 24.75 Oe (blue). The insets in panel (b) show that dynamically driven avalanches (left) exhibit a more rounded shape, whereas thermally driven avalanches (right) are elongated. In panel (c), the mean value of the aspect ratio ε of the avalanches is plotted as a function of the avalanche size. The dots correspond to an average over 100 avalanches and the error bars indicate the standard deviation. The inset shows the probability density function of the threshold field Hth at which thermally driven avalanches develop. The red and black lines correspond to fittings obtained with Eqs (1) and (2), respectively.
Figure 3Threshold field for triggering thermally driven avalanches. (a) Probability density function of the threshold field Hth in semi-log scale for several temperatures T. The bimodal distribution exhibits a peak at low fields associated to the development of finger-like avalanches (in orange), and a broader peak at higher fields corresponding to dendritic avalanches (in blue). (b) Probability that the first avalanche is of filamentary type (orange dots) or branching type (blue dots) as a function of T. (c) H − T diagram Hth(T) showing the measured and computed transition lines for the two different avalanche morphologies.