Magneto-transport properties of thin superconducting strips in the framework of Time Dependent Ginzburg Landau model
Abstract
This dissertation is addressed to summarize my experimental/phenomenological research
activities conducted at the laboratories of Physics Department, University of Salerno. The
experimental work consisted in the fabrication of mesoscopic superconducting devices
made using Electron Beam Lithography (EBL) on Niobium thin films obtained by
magnetron RF sputtering deposition. Among the devices fabricated with success are
worthy of attention thin strips (25 nm) of Niobium with a regular array of antidots in deep
submicron scale (15 nm diameter holes spaced 50 nm) on which studies were performed
about the matching of Abrikosov vortices lattice at high magnetic fields. Other devices
successfully produced have been superconducting strips with lateral dimensions of the
order of microns, but with variable thickness on the nanometer scale. On this type of
devices we have conducted a study of magneto‐transport properties at cryogenic (liquid
helium) and deep cryogenic (300 mK) temperatures in a magnetic field both parallel and
perpendicular to the substrate. The most interesting result was that these devices may
exhibit a behavior of superconducting diode.
In parallel to experimental activities were carried out investigations aimed at the
theoretical and computational description/interpretation of the phenomena observed
experimentally in the framework of Time‐Dependent Ginzburg‐Landau (TDGL) model of
superconductivity. The direct numerical integration of the TDGL as well as its
specialization to magneto‐transport properties of superconducting strips in finite and
unconventional geometry had not tradition at the Department of Physics, and we gave an
original contribution to this research line. Results acquired in this activity that are worth
mentioning are the interpretation of the asymmetry and bistability in a Abrikosov diode
based on superconductor/ferromagnet strips, the interpretation of matching properties
in strips with square arrays of antidots in the nanometer scale, the behavior of
superconducting cylindrical shells in the presence of a magnetic field applied parallel and
perpendicular to the axis, including the dynamics of a single Abrikosov vortex trapped in
these shells, and finally the magneto‐transport properties of superconducting strips with
variable section at the nanoscale. [edited by author]