Current-Induced Pair Breaking in Magnesium Diboride
Milind N. Kunchur

TL;DR
This paper investigates the current-induced pair-breaking in magnesium diboride (MgB2) by extending measurements of the depairing current density across the entire temperature range using pulsed signals, providing new insights into superconductivity limits.
Contribution
It presents the first direct measurement of the depairing current density in MgB2 over all temperatures, utilizing high-power pulsed signals to overcome previous dissipation limitations.
Findings
Successful estimation of Jd across the full temperature range in MgB2.
Demonstration of pulsed signal technique to measure high dissipation densities.
Insights into the relationship between Jc and Jd in type II superconductors.
Abstract
The transport of electrical current through a superconductor falls into three broad regimes: non-dissipative, dissipative but superconducting, and normal or non-superconducting. These regimes are demarkated by two definitions of critical current: one is the threshold current above which the superconductor enters a dissipative (resistive) state; the other is the thermodynamic threshold above which the superconductivity itself is destroyed and the superconducting order parameter vanishes. The first threshold defines the conventional critical current density Jc and the second defines the depairing (or pair-breaking) current Jd. Type II superconductors in the mixed state have quantized flux vortices, which tend to move when acted upon by the Lorentz driving force of an applied transport current. In such a mixed state the resistance vanishes only when vortices are pinned in place by defects…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuperconductivity in MgB2 and Alloys · Iron-based superconductors research · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
