Impact of border defects on the magnetic flux penetration in superconducting films
Alejandro V. Silhanek, Lu Jiang, Cun Xue, Beno\^it Vanderheyden

TL;DR
This paper reviews how border defects in superconducting films influence magnetic flux penetration, combining theoretical models and experimental evidence to understand their effects on various superconducting technologies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of continuous media and vortex dynamics approaches to understanding border defect effects in superconductors.
Findings
Border defects significantly alter flux patterns.
Geometry and temperature influence defect impact.
Border indentations can trigger thermomagnetic instabilities.
Abstract
Defects in superconducting systems are ubiquitous and nearly unavoidable. They can vary in nature, geometry, and size, ranging from microscopic-size defects such as dislocations, grain boundaries, twin planes, and oxygen vacancies, to macroscopic-size defects such as segregations, indentations, contamination, cracks, or voids. Irrespective of their type, defects perturb the otherwise laminar flow of electric current, forcing it to deviate from its path. In the best-case scenario, the associated perturbation can be damped within a distance of the order of the size of the defect if the rigidity of the superconducting state, characterized by the creep exponent , is low. In most cases, however, this perturbation spans macroscopic distances covering the entire superconducting sample and thus dramatically influences the response of the system. In this work, we review the current state of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Diamond and Carbon-based Materials Research · Chemical and Physical Properties of Materials
