Influence of Thermal Fluctuations on Uniform and Nonuniform Superconducting Rings according to the Ginzburg--Landau and the Kramer--Watts-Tobin Models
Jorge Berger

TL;DR
This paper investigates how thermal fluctuations affect superconducting rings using advanced models, revealing insights into persistent currents, vortex behavior, and metastable state lifetimes, with results aligning well with experimental data.
Contribution
It introduces a method to analyze thermal fluctuation effects in complex superconducting rings using TDGL and KWT models, extending previous approaches to nonuniform and large-geometry rings.
Findings
Nonuniformity shifts persistent current maxima to smaller fluxes.
TDGL results agree with recent experimental measurements.
KWT predicts longer lifetimes for metastable states than TDGL.
Abstract
We evaluate the influence of thermal fluctuations on superconducting rings that enclose a magnetic flux, using the time-dependent Ginzburg--Landau (TDGL) or the Kramer--Watts-Tobin (KWT) model, while thermal fluctuations are accounted for by means of Langevin terms. This method is applicable in situations where previous methods are not, such as nonuniform loops, rings with large width to radius ratio and loops with large coherence length to perimeter ratio. We evaluate persistent currents, position and statistical behavior of flux-induced vortices and lifetime of metastable fluxoid states. The influence of nonuniformity on the persistent current does not depend strongly on the details of the cross-section profile; it depends mainly on its first harmonic, but not only on it. As a consequence of nonuniformity the maximum of the persistent current shifts to smaller fluxes and the passage…
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