Magnetic Relaxation in the Peak Effect Region of CeRu$_2$
P.-C. Ho, S. Moehlecke, and M. B. Maple

TL;DR
This study investigates magnetic relaxation and flux pinning in CeRu$_2$ within the peak effect region, revealing temperature-dependent relaxation rates, a stable equilibrium magnetization at higher temperatures, and methods to suppress the peak effect via thermal cycling.
Contribution
It provides new insights into flux line dynamics, relaxation behavior, and suppression techniques of the peak effect in CeRu$_2$, a superconducting material.
Findings
Relaxation rate is higher in the descending-field branch below 4.5 K.
At temperatures above 4.5 K, magnetization stabilizes within 10^4 seconds.
Rapid thermal cycling suppresses the peak effect, aligning magnetization with linear interpolation.
Abstract
The different pinning strengths of the flux line lattice in the peak effect (PE) region of a polycrystalline sample of CeRu with a superconducting transition temperature { K} have been probed by means of magnetization measurements with a SQUID magnetometer as the temperature and the magnetic field are varied. Magnetic relaxation measurements were used to monitor the flux line dynamics in the PE region. For { K} and , where is the field where the magnetization reaches a maximum in the PE region, the relaxation rate was found to be significantly larger in the descending-field branch of the PE than it is in other sections of the PE region. For { K}, the relaxation rate in the entire PE region is so large that the magnetization reached a stable (equilibrium) value within { s}. This experimentally determined stable state…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRare-earth and actinide compounds · Magnetic Properties of Alloys · Nuclear physics research studies
