Diamagnetism, Nernst signal, and finite size effects in superconductors above the transition temperature
T. Schneider, S. Weyeneth

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origin of diamagnetism and Nernst signals above the superconducting transition temperature in various materials, using a zero-dimensional model to explain their universal features and the role of limited homogeneity.
Contribution
It introduces a zero-dimensional model neglecting thermal fluctuations that explains the diamagnetism and Nernst signals above T_c across different superconductors.
Findings
The 0D-model accurately reproduces magnetization curves in nanoparticles and cuprates.
Estimates of homogeneous domain sizes show doping-dependent correlation lengths.
The Nernst signal in NbSi films aligns with the 0D-model's scaling properties.
Abstract
Various superconductors, including cuprate superconductors, exhibit peculiar features above the transition temperature T_c. In particular the observation of a large diamagnetism and Nernst signal in a wide temperature window above T_c attracted considerable attention. Noting that this temperature window exceeds the fluctuation dominated regime drastically and that in these materials the spatial extent of homogeneity is limited, we explore the relevance of the zero dimensional (0D)-model, neglecting thermal fluctuations. It is shown that both, the full 0D-model as well as its Gaussian approximation, mimic the essential features of the isothermal magnetization curves in Pb nanoparticles and various cuprates remarkably well. This analysis also provides estimates for the spatial extent of the homogeneous domains giving rise to a smeared transition in zero magnetic field. The resulting…
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