# Tuning electric charge scattering in YBCO single crystals via   irradiation with MeV electrons

**Authors:** R. V. Vovk, G. Ya. Khadzhai, O. V. Dobrovolskiy

arXiv: 1901.06293 · 2019-01-21

## TL;DR

This study explores how MeV electron irradiation introduces point defects in YBCO single crystals, affecting their electrical and superconducting properties, with a focus on defect distribution and transition temperature changes.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that low-temperature MeV electron irradiation creates non-uniform point defects in YBCO, influencing residual resistance, phonon spectrum, and superconducting transition temperature.

## Key findings

- Defects increase residual resistance and lower T_c linearly with dose.
- Electron irradiation causes broadening of the superconducting transition.
- Excess conductivity remains nearly unchanged after irradiation.

## Abstract

Irradiation with electrons is an efficient approach to inducing a large number of defects with a minimal impact on the material itself. Analysis of the energy transfer from an accelerated particle smashing into the crystal lattice shows that only electrons with MeV energies produce point defects in the form of interstitial ions and vacancies that form perfect scattering centers. Here, we investigate the changes in the resistive characteristics of YBCO single crystals from the 1-2-3 system after several steps of low-temperature irradiation with $0.5-2.5$\,MeV electrons and irradiation doses of up to $8.8\times10^{18}$\,cm$^{-2}$. The penetration depth of such electrons is much larger than the crystal thickness. We reveal that defects appearing in consequence of such electron irradiation not only increase the residual resistance, but they affect the phonon spectrum of the system and lower the superconducting transition temperature linearly with increase of the irradiation dose. Furthermore, the irradiation-induced defects are distributed non-uniformly, that manifests itself via a broadening of the superconducting transition. Interestingly, the excess conductivity remains almost unaffected after such electron irradiation.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

59 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.06293/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.06293