# Effect of Energy-Dependent Proton Irradiation in Thin-Film YBa2Cu3O7−δ Superconductor

**Authors:** Trevor Harrison, Joshua Kim, Katharina Cook, Hope Weeda, Joseph Fogt, Nolan Miles, Kyuil Cho

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ma18214845 · Materials · 2025-10-23

## TL;DR

This paper studies how proton irradiation affects the superconducting properties of YBa2Cu3O7−δ thin films, finding that higher-energy protons more effectively reduce the critical temperature.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that higher-energy protons suppress superconducting critical temperature more effectively in thin films due to fewer clustered defects.

## Key findings

- 1.7 MeV proton irradiation reduced the critical temperature (Tc) of YBa2Cu3O7−δ from 89.4 K to 10.1 K.
- Higher-energy protons (1.7 MeV) were more effective than lower-energy protons (0.6 MeV) in suppressing Tc when suppression exceeded 80%.
- The results align with generalized d-wave AG theory assuming a London penetration depth (λ0) of 215 nm.

## Abstract

The superconducting properties of YBa2Cu3O7−δ thin films were investigated by conducting 1.7 MeV proton irradiations with a total fluence of 2.64×1017
p/cm2. The superconducting critical temperature (Tc) was reduced from 89.4 K to 10.1 K. The experimental procedure was similar to a previous study (0.6 MeV proton irradiation). We compared the effectiveness of Tc suppression by varying the proton energy from 0.6 to 1.7 MeV and found that in general both protons of 1.7 MeV and 0.6 MeV were effective in suppressing the Tc of YBCO. In particular, both results were consistent with the theoretical expectation (generalized d-wave AG theory) when a zero-temperature London penetration depth (λ0) = 215 nm is assumed for thin-film YBCO. For heavily irradiated cases (more than 80% Tc suppression), however, 1.7 MeV protons were more effective in suppressing Tc than 0.6 MeV protons. This can be understood by the fact that in the thin-film limit, higher-energy protons tend to produce less clustered point defects while lower-energy protons tend to create agglomeration of point defects.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Tc (MESH:D016638)
- **Chemicals:** Proton (MESH:D011522), Tc (-)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12608138/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12608138