Enhanced Pinning For Vortices in Hyperuniform Substrates and Emergent Hyperuniform Vortex States
Q. Le Thien, D. McDermott, C.J. Olson Reichhardt, and C. Reichhardt

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that hyperuniform pinning arrays in type-II superconductors significantly enhance vortex pinning efficiency compared to random arrangements, with potential implications for improving superconductor performance.
Contribution
The paper introduces the use of hyperuniform pinning arrays in superconductors, showing they outperform random arrays in vortex pinning through large-scale simulations.
Findings
Hyperuniform pinning arrays improve vortex pinning efficiency.
Vortices in amorphous states exhibit hyperuniformity due to interactions.
Enhanced critical current potential in superconductors with hyperuniform pinning.
Abstract
Disordered hyperuniformity is a state of matter which has isotropic liquid like properties while simultaneously having crystalline like properties such as little variation in the density fluctuations over long distances. Such states arise for the packing of photoreceptor cells in chicken eyes, jammed particle assemblies, and in nonequilibrium systems. An open question is what possible applications could utilize properties of hyperuniformity. One of the major issues for applications of type-II superconductors is how to achieve high critical currents by preventing the motion or depinning of vortices, so there is great interest in understanding which pinning site geometries will lead to the optimal pinning of vortices. Here, using large scale computational simulations, we show that vortices in a type-II superconductor with a hyperuniform pinning arrangement exhibit enhanced pinning…
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